Chief Superintendent Victor Olisa, who recently became the London 
Metropolitan Police Commander, Bexley Borough, is the first Nigerian and
 black man to assume this position in the United Kingdom. 
Mr
 Victor Olisa, a Warri-born, Delta State indigene, now has his name 
listed among the league of Nigerians doing well abroad with his recent 
promotion as a Chief Superintendent with the London Metropolitan police.
In effect, the London-based 52-year-old Victor is now the London Metropolitan Police Commander for Bexley Borough.
He currently lives in Surrey county in southern England, with his physiotherapist wife and two teenage children.
He
 is the first black officer to rise to this position in the United 
Kingdom. His primary assignment is to oversee all policing matters in 
Bexley area.
The office of a Borough Commander of Police in the 
United Kingdom is like that of a Divisional Police Officer (DPO) in the 
Nigeria Police.
The Chief Superintendent, who assumed office, 
precisely on April 16, is said to be one of the three chief 
superintendents from black minority ethnic backgrounds currently working
 for the Metropolitan Police.
Victor, whose grandfather was a 
police officer in Nigeria, left the country for London decades back, but
 it was in 1982 he started his policing career in Surrey, a county in 
southern England.
Three years later, he got promoted to the 
position of a sergeant before he got transferred five years later – in 
1990- to the City of London Police as a detective inspector in the Fraud
 Squad.
It was 13 years after this period, that is, in 2003, that
 he got promoted to the position of a Chief Inspector of Police, and 
this gave him the opportunity to work in the Race Unit at the London 
Home Office.
In 2006, Victor was transferred as a Superintendent 
in Southwark Council before his recent appointment as a Chief 
Superintendent commanding a police borough.
 Speaking to 
reporters in London about his appointment, Victor said his focus was on 
the job rather than being the first “black person” to hold the position.
According
 to him, “policing runs in the family and I have always wanted to be a 
police officer and ethnicity does not affect that.
“I consider 
myself first and foremost a police officer. If being black is an 
advantage, then brilliant; if it’s a disadvantage, I will have to deal 
with that, I can’t hide it.
Victor, who said during his tenure as 
police head, he would discourage racism said: “I am impeccably against 
anyone who uses racist language or behaves in a racist manner.”
Victor Olisa as a young police officer.
He said it was the responsibility of the force to correct wrongs and not an institution for people with racist views.
“This
 will not be allowed under my watch. I believe that everyone should be 
treated with dignity wherever they come from,” Victor said.
The 
information released by Metropolitan Police Service shows that the force
 employs more than 31,000 officers together with about 13,000 police 
staff and 3,700 Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs).
The 
MPS is also being supported by 2,500 volunteer police cadets and more 
than 5,000 volunteer police officers from the Metropolitan Special 
Constabulary (MSC) and its Employer Supported Policing (ESP) programme.
The Metropolitan Police Services covers an area of 620 square miles and a population of 7.2 million.
http://tribune.com.ng/sat/index.php/youth-achiever/8415-meet-victor-olisa-nigerian-born-first-black-london-met-police-chief.html


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