Friday, 4 August 2023
Risk assessment
Ian Acheson has a CAPX piece on the Greenpeace stunt on Rishi Sunak's home.
Greenpeace’s easy access to the Sunak home should be a serious wake-up call
Oliver Dowden has been a busy man this week. He’s been all over the studios talking about the first ever public release of the UK’s National Risk Register. This government tome lists and quantifies all the current big threats to the UKs security, how likely they may be and what’s being done to combat them.
Risk assessments at every level, but do they work? Apparently Oliver Dowden's didn't, but I wonder if anyone assessed the risk of giving the job to Dowden in the first place?
To recap, at 8am on Thursday Greenpeace released pictures of four activists draping Sunak’s home in black fabric to protest at the Government’s plans to issue new licences for North Sea oil exploration. Police were clearly taken by surprise. After a five-hour stand-off and negotiation, the protestors voluntarily descended and were promptly arrested.
Now, you might just see this as a bunch of tree-huggers playing an elaborate prank when they knew the PM and his family were abroad. That’s true, up to a point. But the serious point is that violent terrorists are on the lookout for any weaknesses.
A chap is bound to wonder if Greenpeace did their own risk assessment on the likelihood of falling off the roof or the chances of being shot. Maybe Oliver Dowden will demand their risk assessment and speak to them sternly if they don't have one.
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6 comments:
The likelihood of Sunak getting bumped off by terrorists is probably far greater than him being embarrassed by having a cloth draped over his house. If we add up the number of Islamists who want revenge for Blairite interventions in their countries, dissident Irish republicans, Russian hit-squads, and paranoid schizophrenics who think Rishi needs to be exterminated, then they probably greatly exceed the tiny handful of fools who think we are one new oil well away from armageddon.
Sam - yes the likelihood of Sunak getting bumped off by terrorists is probably far greater. I'm surprised the Greenpeace loons weren't challenged by armed guards or detected by security systems well before they had a chance to do anything.
In the video that I saw there was a (well proportioned) man in a yellow jacket who appeared to open the gate for the loonies.
It would be interesting to know who he was.
https://videos.dailymail.co.uk/preview/mol/2023/08/03/1036977025287999409/636x382_MP4_1036977025287999409.mp4
DAD - yes it would be interesting to know who he was.
DAD, Not certain, as the video is too short, but it looked like Boris Johnson to me.
Penseivat
Penseivat - ha ha, let's hope it was.
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