Posted By Graeme
Duty of Care by the looks of it, and the article below kind of says that to.
General duty of care to employee and those effected by their operations.
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IslamOnline.net & News Agencies
De Menezes was shot eight times by two Scotland Yard marksmen.
CAIRO — No Metropolitan police officers will face criminal charges over the fatal shooting last year of an innocent Brazilian man who was mistaken for a suicide bomber, a leading British newspaper reported Saturday, July 15.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has ruled out murder or manslaughter charges after a review of the circumstances surrounding the killing of the 27-year-old electrician Jean Charles de Menezes, The Guardian said.
But the CPS, which oversees criminal prosecutions in England and Wales, is expected to announce on Monday, July 17, that the Metropolitan police as an organization will be charged with breaching health and safety at work laws over the unnecessary shooting.
De Menezes was shot eight times by two Scotland Yard marksmen on an underground train at Stockwell on July 22 last year, the day after a failed attempt by suicide bombers to blow up three tube trains and a bus.
A health and safety prosecution would mean an unlimited fine on the police authority.
The Health and Safety at Work Act (HASWA) is a law enacted in 1974 that set basic principles which must be followed by both employees and employers to help ensure a safe working environment.
Under the law, employers must ensure, as far as reasonably practicable, that not only employees but the wider public who might be affected by their operations "are not thereby exposed to risks to their health or safety".
In the wake of the London attacks, Britain's top police officer Sir Ian Blair ordered his men to shoot "suspected" bombers in the head.
Rights activists slammed the shoot-to-kill policy, which was supported by Prime Minister Tony Blair, and said that they would mainly target ethnic minorities.
"Insult"
De Menezes's family viewed potential health and safety charges as an "insult," according to Jasmin Khan, the spokeswoman for the Jean Charles de Menezes Family Campaign.
She told The Independent that the family would push for a judicial review of the decision not to bring charges, and that a private prosecution was being considered
"The family really want manslaughter or murder charges — that is the only decision they will be happy with or accept on Monday," she said.
Harriet Wistrich said the family were likely to be "very unhappy" if no officer was prosecuted.
"They would like to see officers held to account on a personal level, for somebody to be charged with a homicide offence," she told The Guardian.
The report on the incident by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC), delivered to the CPS last January, raised the possibility of manslaughter charges against the two firearms officers and Scotland Yard Commander Cressida Dick, the senior designated officer in charge of the firearms operation on the day of the shooting.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) watchdog has conducted two inquiries into de Menezes' death.
One — on which the CPS will base its decision — about events leading up to and including the shooting; the other into comments made by the Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair in the immediate aftermath, who supported the shoot-to-kill policy.
Unprofessional
"If there was gross negligence involved, then those responsible officers should face appropriate charges," said Bunglawala.
The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), the largest Muslim organization in Britain, could not keep itself from jumping into the fray as British Muslims also suffered from the police raid on innocent fellow men.
"If there was gross negligence involved, then those responsible officers should face appropriate charges," MCB spokesman Inayat Bunglawal told The Guardian.
Bunglawala believed that the circumstances surrounding the de Menezes killing have raised serious questions about the level of professionalism displayed by the senior officers involved in that incident and whether the killing could have possibly been avoided.
Ties between British Muslims and the Metropolitan police hit all time low in May following the arrest of two British Muslims on claims of involvement in a biological terror plot, which later proved a mistake.
Mohammed Abdul Kahar was shot by police during the raid while his brother Abul Koyair was seized.
Kahar accused police of shooting him without warning and without being threatened in any way.