In light of the recent wave of
worldwide terror attacks, Met Police Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe said on the
police's official blog
Sunday he believes the threat from terrorism is very real and expresses
"a greater sense of fear that Britain will be the next victim."
In the event of a terrorist attack, he wrote, the police advise the public to "Run, Hide, Tell."
"It
may seem blindingly obvious, but some people don't run, they will duck
down where they are, do all sorts of different things in the panic," he
said.
"So
let's be really clear -- run as far away as possible and when you can't
run any further, hide, and then tell -- call the police because we've
got the people, the resources, the firearms to deal with it," he told
the paper. "It's very straightforward."
'Lots of things working in our favor'
Despite
the threat level in the United Kingdom being at "severe" since 2014,
Hogan-Howe wrote that the British "way of life and culture" have been
instrumental in preventing terrorist attacks similar to those seen
across Europe, most recently in
Nice and
Normandy, France;
Brussels, Belgium; and
Wurzburg and Ansbach, Germany.
The
world watched "the recent terrorist atrocities unfold with a terrifying
and depressing sense of horror and dread," the commissioner said. But
amid growing public concern in the United Kingdom, he said there are
"lots of things working in our favor."
Hogan-Howe
praised police's close working relationship with the MI5 and MI6
intelligence services as a "world-beater" that has given Britain "an
advantage in intelligence and ultimately foiling plots." Strict gun
control laws also deter violence in Britain, the commissioner said.
Number of firearms officers boosted
In
the blog post the commissioner points out the United Kingdom has a
social climate of "tolerance and acceptance" that is "united in
defeating terrorism."
"We don't
stigmatize the millions of British Muslims whose values and faith
completely reject the terrorists' litany of hate," Hogan-Howe said.
In an effort to prevent a large-scale terror attack similar to
Paris in November, in which 130 people died, police have increased the overall number of firearms officers in the country by 600 -- to a total of 2,800, Hogan-Howe said.
He
acknowledged in his closing remarks that his message might not be
reassuring to some, but encouraged people to be defiant in preserving
their beliefs, values and way of life.
"We will not become like them, we will not hate, we will not be cowed and because of this they will never win," he wrote.
CNN's Vasco Cotovio and Tim Hume contributed to this report.
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