The first squatter to be sentenced under the new squatting law has been
imprisoned for twelve weeks after being arrested in a long-term empty
flat in Islington, London on 2nd September.
21-year-old Alex Haigh had been living in the property for a couple of
months before the law came into force, along with other squat-mates –
two of whom are now facing the strong arm of law too. One received a
fine while the other is awaiting sentence and a possible jail term. A
long way from media caricatures of long-haired posh drop outs - Alex is
an apprentice bricklayer from Plymouth and had moved to London looking
for work.
Neighbours had been unaware of the flat being occupied, while the
owners, a London housing association, had known and independently
started civil proceedings under the old system.
This didn't stop the pigs taking it on themselves to batter down the
door and arrest the occupiers – only informing the owners afterwards.
Since the government passed the bill, ministers have been urging the Met
to come down hard on squatters to act as a 'deterrent'. The government
says it expects around 4,200 squatters to be prosecuted each year.
What's a few ruined lives when there are vacant buildings at risk of
being occupied eh?
Danny Beltane of SNOB(aha)
the Brighton squatters association. "This is a far harsher sentence
than anyone expected - this smacks of the kind of punitive sentencing
handed out after the riots. This is the real class war. How can they
justify taking someone from a situatuation where they were provoding for
themselves and forcing them into state incarceration at the cost of
thousands a week?"
STREET'S AHEAD
Alex and his friends were arrested around 24 hours before the first raid in Brighton that SchNEWS reported on,
though overall the earliest eviction we know about (so far) was of a
crew based in Street, Somerset. Despite living there for a couple of
months and not causing any problems, bored local cops decided to kick in
the door and arrest everyone inside at 9am on Saturday 1st September.
If anyone can prove they were nicked under section 144 earlier, we'll
send them a free graphics book.
With the wild variations in enforcement – stretching from a friendly
bobby asking if you'd mind leaving, to three months inside (for a guilty
plea!) – many squatters are looking towards the thousands of vacant
commercial and industrial properties. Unsurprisingly the lobbyists
behind criminalisation are already pushing for the law to be extended
and backbench Tories are lining up to lend the latest bandwagon their
support. Chatham MP Tracey Crouch snarled “it's important that we look
into [non-residential squatting] and try and outlaw it as soon as
possible” – no doubt before retreating to one of her taxpayer funded
homes.
For advice and support to help hold on to your home and keep you out of prison you could do worse than the Squatters' Legal Network.
No comments:
Post a Comment