"At present we are awaiting response from the Home Secretary on the issue, and until further confirmation is received it is too early to set down a firm timetable for any possible implementation, and what the final cost of such a scheme would be. However, it is believed that the technology could be very useful in combating potentially dangerous situations in target buildings," a press officer for the Greater London Authority Conservatives told Sputnik.
The project foresees the installment of electronic equipment to alert for gunfire at hospitals, museums, train stations and shopping centers. The equipment will have microphones and infrared cameras to identify gunfire and automatically alert the police. The procedure could considerably speed up the police response, thus raising the level of security.
An automatic alert system "would remove the need to make emergency calls in the first place, cutting response times by several minutes and saving lives in the process," according to a written statement by GLA Conservative Roger Evans' sent to Sputnik.
"Furthermore, the system would be unintrusive – reducing the need for heavy metal detectors, x-ray machines or an on-going armed presence," he added.
The proposal comes in the wake of recent terrorist attacks by radicalized Muslims in Paris, resulting in the deaths of 17 people in the Paris area. On January 7, gunmen killed 12 people at the Paris office of Charlie Hebdo magazine, known for publishing cartoons, lampooning political and religious leaders, including the Prophet Muhammad. The next day, another gunman, believed to be associated with Islamic State, shot a police officer dead near the French capital. The following day the same gunman killed four hostages in a Paris kosher food shop.
Following the attacks, European police service Europol reported there was a potential threat of new terrorist attacks across the European Union, including the United Kingdom, Belgium, and the Netherlands.