War on terror/ Arming the police
One was a young
policewoman, unarmed on the outskirts of Paris and felled by an assault rifle.
Her partner, also without weapons, could do nothing to stop the gunman. Another
was a first responder with a side arm, rushing to the Charlie Hebdo offices where
a pair of masked men with high-powered weapons had opened fire on an editorial
meeting. Among their primary targets: the armed police bodyguard inside the
room.
With the deaths of the three French
officers during three days of terror in the Paris region and the suggestion of
a plot in Belgium to kill police, European law enforcement agencies are
rethinking how — and how many — police should be armed.
Scotland Yard said Sunday it was
increasing the deployment of officers allowed to carry firearms in Britain,
where many cling to the image of the unarmed "bobby." In Belgium,
where officials say a terror network was plotting to attack police, officers
are again permitted to take their service weapons home.
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