Advice sought
At work I've just had the most unbelievable instructions from management. The background is: I work nights as a security officer at a university. There are a lot of residential students, including under 18's, and a lot of my work is to stop/encourage them not to behave anti socially. Vandalism, bullying and so on. Sometimes it has been neccessary to stop people from assaulting others by physically moving someone away from the incident. Well the instructions from management are that we are not allowed in any way - including speaking! - to prevent a criminal incident from taking place. We are to stand a distance away and phone the police and wait for the police to come. If someone is being beaten up or a young woman is being assaulted then it will be a disciplinary offence for me to say or do anything about it.
I'm absolutely furious about it. One because they have taken away my rights under the law to prevent a breach of the peace (can they do this, is it legal?) and two because it's insane to introduce this kind of thing. I found out about it at the same time that Ian Huntley was on trial for the murder of the two school girls at Soham. If this happened at our place then anyone who saw it and made a move to prevent it would be committing a disciplinary offence. Also there's the issue of loco parentis - would parents who saw their child being assaulted or abused imagine that good parenting involves standing back, saying nothing and making a phone call while the attacker finishes off their work.
I've questioned this policy using a specific incident which happened last term. This was when a visitor to the university was attacked by a drunk student and assaulted. The student was told to stop by myself and a colleague but went back for more at which point he was physically moved away. The reply was that it would be okay to go to the incident once the attacker had finished and moved off but I would need to wait for him to finish!!!! It also means that if I was being assaulted it would be a disciplinary offence for my colleauges to assist me, they would have to wait until the attacker finished at his leisure and then they could approach.
I'm furious about this and will use my union to take it up and am considering my other options against the university. In the meantime I'm interested in how others see this and also, if posssible, any legal references to whether an employer can override the law of the land in this fashion.
Thanks.