/ 14 September 2004

Palace security to be beefed up after Batman visit

Security measures at Buckingham Palace need improving, a minister said on Tuesday, a day after a protester dressed as Batman slipped past police and scaled the royal residence’s facade.

But people shouldn’t be prevented from coming close to Britain’s main palaces and monuments, Home Secretary David Blunkett added.

”It would be very easy indeed to stop people getting anywhere near our major palaces and monuments,” Blunkett told British Broadcasting Corporation radio.

”We would just put concrete blocks, we would have dogs and armed police or army inside those concrete blocks.”

”I don’t want it because the terrorists would have actually won if people couldn’t walk round those palaces and monuments,” he said.

Protester Jason Hatch (33) used a ladder to scale a perimeter wall before climbing onto the facade of Queen Elizabeth II’s main residence on Monday. He perched for more than five hours on a ledge near the balcony where the royal family appears on ceremonial occasions. No royal family members were in residence at the time of

the stunt.

Hatch is a member of the Fathers 4 Justice group, which is campaigning for greater custody rights for divorced or separated fathers. He was still being held by London’s Metropolitan Police early on Tuesday, a spokesperson for the force said.

Hatch’s success in climbing the palace’s perimeter wall prompted fresh questions about the much-criticised and recently overhauled royal security operation.

Blunkett told the BBC that new alarms and camera systems had been put in place at Buckingham Palace after the September 11 attacks and that police inside and outside the palace had been armed.

”I’m satisfied that we did what was necessary,” he said.

”I’m not satisfied that everything worked perfectly last night, although the alarms and cameras did.

”We need to make it a lot less easy for someone to get a ladder onto the outer balustrade. I’m not satisfied that we have got that right.” – Sapa-AP