Operation Sassoon

Operation Sassoon

Operation Sassoon provides a basic generic framework for an emergency evacuation plan of any part of London, or Heathrow, in the case of a major terrorist attack in the British capital. It is part of an extensive anti-terror plan installed by the British Government in response to the rising threat of terrorist attacks in the United Kingdom. The plan, first drawn up in 2003, oversees the partial or complete evacuation of the inner parts of London after either a large-scale assault affecting a larger area of the city or an event having a lasting effect over a longer period of time, such as a biological, chemical or nuclear attack. Besides the actual evacuation process, Operation Sassoon covers the principles of largescale evacuation, the installation of temporary shelters for evacuees in assigned areas outside the city, activation of the plan and the roles and responsibilities of agencies under the plan, as well as the deployment of police and military forces for maintaining civil order after a major attack has occurred.

Contents

History

According to newspaper reports, the plans were drawn up upon the instructions of John Prescott MP, the Deputy Prime Minister, and senior officers at the Metropolitan Police. The draft plans were submitted to the London Resilience Forum, which at the time was chaired by Nick Raynsford MP with Ken Livingstone as his deputy.

A plan was developed by a multi agency team made up of local authority,transport and police representatives led by a senior MPS officer working closely with colleagues in the South East and East of England Regions. The first version of the framework document was published on December 31st 2003 and the current version was last revised in April 2005.

On October 25th 2004, Paul Goodman, Conservative MP for Wycombe, tabled a Parliamentary question in the House of Commons which was answered by Nick Raynsford MP, the then Minister of State for Local and Regional Government, on plans to use High Wycombe as a care shelter as part of Operation Sassoon. The answer given by the Minister is on record at Hansard.

Operation Sassoon has specific importance as the South East has the highest number of potential targets for disruptive action in England. These include:

  • five major airports and the most congested airspace
  • the largest number of nuclear establishments
  • 11 maritime ports, four container ports and the most congested sea-lanes
  • around 700 miles of coastline
  • the most complex motorway and railway networks
  • a significant number of large-scale social and sporting events and locations

The surrounding regions of South Buckinghamshire, Hampshire and Oxfordshire would be involved in receiving evacuees.

The plan was replaced in 2009 by a less rigid set of arrangements to evacuate instead parts of London rather than the whole of London. OP Sassoon has therefore been consigned to history.

What is known about Operation Sassoon

  • Public transport loading points (known as HUBS) have been pre-determined; people will be expected to walk to these locations, from where they will then be transported to unloading points (known as HEADS). Special road routes, known as High Capacity Emergency Access Routes (HCEARS) have been designated for people who self evacuate in their own private vehicles, and to allow for the expedient access of emergency services vehicles arriving from outside London. There is a specific traffic plan to deal with the use of the M25 and the radial feeding motorways. It will have a reliance on police resources as blocking vehicles.
  • Railway stations have been identified within London, which are suitable for the embarkation of evacuees (Rail Hubs). Typically, these stations are the existing Central London termini, with suitable fall-backs also identified. In the event of a large-scale evacuation being invoked, the normal advertised timetable will be suspended and replaced by an evacuation service designed to provide a safe and simple means of transporting the maximum possible number of evacuees away from the affected area in the shortest possible time.
  • An air exclusion zone will be introduced over the affected areas.
  • Once evacuated, Local Authorities and the voluntary sector will provide for evacuees. Initial reception will provide basic accommodation, drinking water and toilet facilities for up to 48 hours after the incident.

Controversies over Operation Sassoon

On September 21st 2004, an internal Metropolitan Police inquiry was launched after detailed plans for the mass evacuation of London were found on the seat of a train in a Tesco carrier bag. The plans, discovered on one of four CD-ROMs which were in the carrier bag, were found by a warehouse worker from Essex who had been travelling on a commuter train between London and Gravesend, Kent. According to The Sun newspaper, the dossier was headed Operation Sassoon - Metropolitan Police Traffic Plan for the Mass Evacuation of London and dated June 3rd, 2004.

Operation Sassoon would see railway stations outside the capital receiving Londoners escaping a disaster. Local authorities in neighbouring counties were deeply concerned that the local infrastructure would not cope with the sheer volume of people fleeing the capital. They have stressed to the London Resilience Forum that evacuation should be used as a last resort and only in the most "catastrophic of circumstances".

The planning details for Operation Sassoon are being kept secret, hence no details being published by the Government or the media. As of August 2005, a google search for the term brings up only 237 hits. Websites such as the Hampshire County Council website include some of the scarce traces of Operation Sassoon information on the internet.


There are plans to update the current Operation Sassoon have been subject to some disagreement between partners within London and the surrounding regions. It is unlikely that the new plan will be delivered for the August 2007 deadline.

Preparation for Operation Sassoon

On September 7th 2003, the emergency services in London conducted a terrorism preparation exercise for the early stages of Operation Sassoon at Bank Underground station. Since 2003, there have been six large-scale live exercises and 32 "tabletop exercises" that test the effectiveness of strategic plans.

In July 2004, the London Resilience Forum announced in its second annual report its intention to develop detailed support plans for each agency involved in Operation Sassoon, including a communications strategy and "tabletop exercises" to test more detailed overall plans.

According to The Sun's newspaper article of September 21st 2004, road signs have been built by the Highways Agency ready for use in a major alert and road routes to be used in the event of such a disaster have been laid out.

Towns such as High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire are earmarked as temporary care shelters for evacuees.

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • W. H. R. Rivers — Photograph of Rivers taken by Henry Maull Born 12 March 1864(1864 03 12) …   Wikipedia

  • Henry Head — Infobox Scientist name = Sir Henry Head box width = image width = caption =Photograph of Head c. 1895 birth date =birth date|1861|8|4 birth place =Stoke Newington, London Borough of Hackney death date =death date and age|1940|10|8|1861|8|4 death… …   Wikipedia

  • literature — /lit euhr euh cheuhr, choor , li treuh /, n. 1. writings in which expression and form, in connection with ideas of permanent and universal interest, are characteristic or essential features, as poetry, novels, history, biography, and essays. 2.… …   Universalium

  • Geschichte des Judentums im Irak — Irakische Juden sind im Irak geborene und / oder dem irakischen Kulturerbe entstammende Juden. Die Geschichte der Juden im Irak ist seit der Zeit der babylonischen Gefangenschaft ca. 586 v. Chr. dokumentiert. Als babylonisches Judentum war das… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Good-Bye to All That — Infobox Book name = Good Bye to All That title orig = translator = image caption = Cover with a portrait of Graves author = Robert Graves illustrator = cover artist = country = United Kingdom language = English series = genre = Autobiography… …   Wikipedia

  • IRAQ — IRAQ, country in S.W. Asia (for period prior to 634 C.E. see mesopotamia and babylonia ). The Diaspora of Iraq was one of the most ancient of the Jewish people. The Jews came to Babylon after the destruction of the First Temple (586 B.C.E.), or… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Histoire des Juifs en Irak — L’histoire des Juifs en Irak ou dans le territoire lui correspondant actuellement et dénommé autrefois Mésopotamie ou Babylonie, remonte à l exil de Babylone, narré dans la Bible, pour se terminer dans les années 1950. À la suite de la prise de… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Juifs de Babylone — Histoire des Juifs en Irak Les Juifs et le judaïsme Généralités Qui est Juif ? · Terminologie · Conversion Judaïsme : Principes de foi Noms de Dieu dans le judaïsme Tanakh (Bible hébraïque) : Torah …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Rothschild family — House of Rothschild redirects here. For the film, see The House of Rothschild. For the German surname Rothschild , see Rothschild (disambiguation). For one of the investment banks founded by the family, see N M Rothschild Sons. For one of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Bagdad-Juden — Synagoge von Kaifeng Zeichnung von Jean Domenge, 1722 Juden in China sind eine Minderheit von einigen tausend Personen, die damit gegenüber der Mehrheit der Han Chinesen von mehr als einer Milliarde zahlenmäßig kaum ins Gewicht fallen. Aufgrund… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”