“At this moment, we do not have elements that allow us to say that there is an introduction of these elements in the security forces and services, either with a view to radicalization or elements of the extreme right. In fact, we do not have elements that allow us to reach that conclusion in a safe way”, said Anabela Cabral Ferreira to the deputies of the parliamentary committee on Constitutional Affairs, Rights, Freedoms and Guarantees.
However, she maintained that the General Inspection of Internal Administration (IGAI) is aware of this reality, namely through the monitoring of social networks where these hate speeches and incitement to violence are normally expressed.
The judge was also concerned about inorganic movements within the security forces, such as the Zero Movement.
“Infiltration of security forces and services is a difficult issue. Naturally, we are concerned about inorganic movements, because these movements are faceless and do not provide interlocutors with whom we can dialogue. To that extent, the concern is great”, she explained.
At the request of the non-registered deputy Joacine Katar Moreira, the general inspector was on the parliamentary committee to explain the discriminatory actions by the security forces and services in the exercise of their functions.
Anabela Cabral Ferreira guaranteed that “there is not a generalized problem of discriminatory practices” by the police, but she stressed that this “does not mean that the problem does not exist”.
“There actually is [discriminatory practices]. By all the means we have at our disposal, whether legislative or at the training level, this has to be completely eliminated from the practice of the security forces and services", she stressed.
The inspector general argued that the function of maintaining security is “absolutely vital and fundamental for the functioning of the rule of law”, and it is therefore natural that it should “always be guided by criteria that discriminatory practices do not exist”.
And what about the influence of the far left? Communisn is just a great a threat. Nazism accounted for 20 million deaths during the second world war, communism has totalled over 100 million deaths so far!
By Ian from Lisbon on 21 Oct 2021, 09:37
If Ms.Anabela Cabral Ferreira were to put staff looking at footage from the cameras we have just downtown, she´d find police officers look the other way when black ppl are being harassed/toyed with by white foreigners.
I myself have had the surreal situation where a local black man in a WHEELCHAIR was being forcefully moved out of his chair(and onto the floor? The man desperately trying to plead w/ them, them getting a kick out of this) by a couple of Chinese tourists. A policeman was watching this and doing nothing; I screamed and screamed for the couple to stop this, the policeman watched in amusement; all the brits watching this from the outside chairs of a coffee establishment ALSO SAID AND DID NOTHING, no one helped.
THIS WAS DOWNTOWN, not neighbourhoods like (for eg)DAMAIA where police routinely targets black ppl who live there and there are no cameras w/footage to look at. I understand Ms Anabela Cabral Ferreira probably doesn´t have “friends” and “acquaintances” that are black LIVING through this violence, but it´s no excuse to not take a more proactive stance on what is clearly HER JOB.
If you do your JOB, Ms. Ananela Cabral Ferreira, maybe you´ll find out there are a lot of bad creatures hidden under the rocks (the police uniforms, in this case). But to do that you will 1rst have to LOOK and be ready to shatter some of your errouneous percetions that you´re doing enough. YOU´RE CLEARLY NOT.(I´m white, Ms Anabela Ferreira. But i´m not blind, deaf, mute and stupid -and I refuse to apologize for it).
By guida from Lisbon on 22 Oct 2021, 05:30