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Camden lashes out at opponents of council house sell off

Keith Parkins | 27.07.2004 15:20 | Repression | Social Struggles

At the end of last year Camden tenants said no to a sell off of their council houses. This was in spite of the council spending £500,000 of taxpayers money to get a yes vote. The council are now lashing out at their opponents.


Camden tried to privatise its council housing. £500,000 was spent by the council in a propaganda offensive. The opposition had nothing. They held meetings, leafleted, put up posters. The opposition won.

A few months later, Dame Jane Roberts, neo-Labour leader of Camden Council, addressed a meeting at Camden Town Hall. Such was her concern for what people had to say, she left as soon as she had cast her pearls to the swine. Labour councillors were noticeable by their absence.

Various suggestions were put forward, including that of tenants running their houses all by themselves. The one alternative that was not acceptable, was privatisation.

No matter how badly council run housing is, and it is bad, the alternative is far worse. Pavilion Housing Association was given as an example. The Audit Commission has now concurred, and has published a damning indictment on Pavilion.

Camden though are very poor losers. Especially when it is neo-Labour policy that is defeated

The council are pursuing (harassing may be a better word) one of the leaders of the No campaign through the courts for “placing posters on a bus shelter by means of sticky brown tape”. The poster, advertising an anti-ALMO meeting last November, might cost local resident and member of the local branch of Defend Council Housing Alan Walter £1,460 in fines and court costs if the council wins the case.

This case has be seen as yet another attack on community activists for daring to stick their heads above the barricades and criticise our corrupt politicians who have their heads stuck so far up the arse of Big Business that they are blind to the light of day let alone see what is going on in the communities they are allegedly elected to serve.

Recently we have seen, for example, ASBOs (anti-social behaviour orders) used to silence political dissent.

Reference

Inspection report: Pavilion Housing Association, Audit Commission, July 2004

Battle of the ALMO, SchNEWS, 23 July 2004

Keith Parkins, Social landlords are deviating from their intended purpose, Indymedia UK, 20 January 2004

Keith Parkins, Social housing landlords the new corporations, Corporate Watch newsletter No 17, January-February 2004

Keith Parkins, Camden council house transfer - Camden Town Hall meeting, Indymedia UK, 11 February 2004

Keith Parkins, Anti-Social Behaviour Orders, Indymedia UK, 28 June 2004

Keith Parkins, Misuse of Anti-Social Behaviour Orders, Indymedia UK, 5 July 2004

Keith Parkins, Audit Commission savage Pavilion Housing Association, Indymedia UK, 27 July 2004

Sore Losers, Rotten Boroughs, Private Eye, 23 July – 5 August 2004




Keith Parkins

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

investment in poverty

27.07.2004 17:12

to my mind the whole corporate and private complicity to shore up the property market reflects a regressive mentality which is motivated by a fear of social inclusion. Such investment is predominantly in the interests of the owners of property, obviously, and demonstrates a retreat into the supposed safety of the englishmans castle. These bastions are also the symbolic home of the powers that be ; their refuge is the force of the gun which is the tool of all technocratic dictatorship.

bob


Camden Sucks

27.07.2004 18:05

Camden is squeezing private properties into every square inch of waste ground they can find between council estates, often on ruins of former youth clubs or pre-school nurseries. Land which should be designated as open spaces to relax or play areas for existing residents. Then when the yuppies move in, they complain about the "feral" kids in the neighbourhood to police, incurring ASBO's and exclusion orders.

Dame's a Dime