Blog Archive

Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts

Friday, 1 September 2017

ASB revisited (again and again and...)

Again we must come to the question of what to do, seriously, with those who would ruin it for the majority of us who know that being a cowardly bullying criminal is not the way to go. And we arrive at the crux of the matter, and a question that needs to be asked and answered thoroughly and seriously:

Can the council be accused of funding anti-social and other criminal behaviour?

It seems the best that can be said at the moment is that they are, but accidentally. Maybe they need help from courts, but in many cases experience says they need to act more decisively themselves. Sometimes they act, sometimes it works, but too often it takes too long, or it's not enough. No-one should pass the buck, they should all work together, and councils need to do their part in stopping crime. If you need reminding of what councils are capable of, take a look at the news; then unfortunately you can't help but wonder, if they are there as seems to many to be the case, exactly what levels of incompetence and/or corruption are at work. Are the findings of various audits, reports, the treatment of tenants and residents and the complaints about apparently unaccountable councils simply because they have been allowed to get away with it?

Firstly this is certainly not about estates or otherwise, as we are in all areas affected, by people from all areas. And, again, the two sides of London always there, this time simply the difference between those of us who just want to care for and enjoy the areas we appreciate being a part of, and those who could share in it too but have to get off by constantly choosing to indulge in criminal activity - those who cannot be happy unless they are making someone else unhappy. Needless to say they are mostly the usual pathetic bully stereotype, if you've ever had the misfortune to confront one, but also potentially dangerous. This is where society is supposed to come into effect - laws to ensure we don't need to be dragged down and have the lunatics running the asylum, and to protect us from having to confront anyone, possibly getting ourselves charged in the process. When laws are not enforced, the criminal becomes more dangerous, to state the bleeding obvious. When police protect and take action, sometimes the only option open to them is to co-operate with the council. Especially in cases of anti-social behaviour and harassment - which are no less damaging than other, more 'obvious' clear-cut crimes, sometimes more so - the council should then also act.

However, if a council takes only one part of its remit and houses people, provides them with other support, without then enforcing the terms of their tenancy and making sure they do not ruin the lives of others, are the council not just funding the criminals? The rest of us, living on estates or not, have a right to be protected from crime, and where the council have a duty to also act they should, rather than just supporting it, inadvertently or not. It is all part of the same problem, feeding into all areas. At a meeting which had to be called because of the growing issue of anti-social behaviour even in plusher parts of SE16 (thank goodness the people there know how to and do take action) an attendee described how in nearby student housing the problem of drugs was causing issues with safety and quality of life in the whole area. A local MP was a speaker, and said that he bet those involved in creating problems were not the students themselves, but, presumably, people from outside. However, the attendee said it was the student area involved in the trouble, and what was needed was proper CCTV and security. An understandable and excusable assumption on the MP's (and probably others') part, or a kind of Sociology 101 answer, rather than a deeper understanding and explanation of what was going on? The answers have to come from all those affected. You cannot just say some people deserve to be treated well, because they are a certain 'type', or expect basic rights and behaviour for and from a certain class: haven't we got past that yet? Again, looking at the news, it's about time we did.

Unfortunately the meeting apparently didn't do too much. Again, complaints not listened to or at least not acted upon, action not taken, things allowed to get worse.

A good start would be for local authorities to support those who look after their area - estate, flat, maisonette, tower block, luxury apartment, mansion, whatever - which would then benefit everyone in every situation. It should not even really be something we should have to ask for. We need councils, especially where they have the remit, to act as they are legally supposed to and make sure people abide by their side of the agreement, not just laugh at the rest of us while indulging in their ruinous lives. As mentioned in the earlier post, councils are quick to cite crime as a reason to 'regenerate', but the housing  is not the problem, particularly if you do nothing to keep safe the people in it and do not act to stop crime. And regeneration will obviously not deal with the issues. It will just be 'thanks for the new house' and things will carry on for the criminals. In some cases the removal of one person, the council using their powers as they should, would send the message needed and save the lives - sometimes literally -  of many others. Why not just deal with the crime, as it should be? The network would not grow, crime would not just continue because ' nothing's gonna happen'.  If crime is a problem do something about it, rather than letting it be another way in which the council does nothing, even the stuff it has a requirement to. We have a right to feel safe in and enjoy our homes. The council need to concentrate on this rather than supporting, even funding, however inadvertently, lives of crime.



Sunday, 30 July 2017

ASB, crime and stupidity

https://flic.kr/p/PLCJf4

Given the many tweets over the past few days regarding the scooter riding phone thieves in SE16, it's about time to out those hinted at in an earlier post, those with nothing better to do, as not representative of even many of the poorest around here. Seeing their cars, tattoos and of course phones and bikes, they are doing better than many others. They are also not rebels against the system, but actually help developers and those wishing to demonize and stereotype get their way. The problem is, as many know, the council aren't upholding their side of the deal and making sure people behave. They need to realise how lucky they are to live here and, if, as most of us do, they don't appreciate it, do us all a favour and be made to clear off. The council always uses crime (exaggerating figures too) as one of the excuses to regenerate, but if they do nothing about it to help the apparently stretched local police and keep homes safe and decent, then it's hard to square the circle. Those suffering because of this behaviour will then be made to suffer losing the homes they've seen allowed to deteriorate despite many reports. The criminals are cowards,  often recruiting young children who knows no better and see adventure and a way to please to run errands. Services are stretched because these people also prey on the most vulnerable, and are allowed to. The criminals begin to believe they, rather than local authorities, run the area, and have no respect for it or the majority good people in it, who they bully and harass. It is not the area making these people bad - even the Queen needs guards outside her place - but the usual dismissive attitude allowing criminals to ruin areas, of every demographic. If crime is allowed anywhere the result is inevitable, whether estate, luxury apartment or palace.  And maybe valuing, strengthening and building up communities would help, rather than destroying them, which seems to be in vogue. Greenland Dock is beautiful, and rebuilt, but if someone is still allowed to just see it as an escape route as they apparently do then the answer must be something should be done to stop them. Likewise anywhere else. Its no good pretending the problem doesn't exist and it's all restaurants and bars and cool, but it exists because it does everywhere and has o be dealt with everywhere. Thankfully at least one arrest was made yesterday, seen from a bus near the Old Kent Road, connected to what I don't know, but if the council just say there's no action again and again, is it a surprise things don't change? And a newly built home for criminals will only enforce their 'I can do what I want' mentality. Councils need to put the majority of good people first, rather than contemptuously dismiss them until they can regenerate or a disaster happens. Police need to treat even so-called low level crime seriously, before it gets worse and because of the distress it causes. They must deal with those pathetic bullying criminals with too much power and time on their hands. The minority idiots should not be allowed to ruin the the area.