By
New Worker correspondent
THOUSANDS
of Londoners gathered last Saturday – half in Shoreditch east London and the
other half at the Elephant and Castle in south London – in spite of freezing
wind, rain and sleet to demand affordable homes for Londoners.
“Cap
rents, not benefits!” “Social housing not social cleansing!” and “Housing is a
human right!” were among the slogans shouted as local residents, trade
unionists and a wide spectrum of campaigning groups marched carrying hundreds
of colourful banners and placards.
The
two marches met, with a loud cheer, at the south end of Tower Bridge and turned
long Tooley Street a few yards to surround City Hall, the headquarters of the
Greater London Assembly and Tory London Mayor Boris Johnson.
As
the marchers approached the glass structure and the wind from the river added
another dimension of cold to the air as it was filled with ever louder chanting
of “Boris Out! Boris Out!”
Marchers
hold Johnson responsible for the policy of allowing the vast council housing
estates that once gave decent housing to London’s working class to be swept
away to be replaced by new developments of luxury flats.
These
flats are way beyond the reach of most London workers. Many are bought by
wealthy foreigners purely as an investment. Housing costs in London are rising
so fast they only have to buy a property, hold it empty for a few years to be
able to resell it at double what they paid for it.
So
while more and more Londoners are being forced on to the streets they are
surrounded by new beautiful homes that are just standing empty. Those that are
let command rents that are higher than many workers’ total pay packet.
As
the marchers passed through the working class areas of east and south London –
ethnically very diverse areas – the local residents of every colour, race and
nationality waved and cheered from balconies and windows or stood in a line
outside shops to clap and cheer in spite of the weather.
They
were the same streets that have seen many housing campaigns, against
landlordism, against evictions and for fair rents, waged by previous
generations.
An
estimated 5,000 encircled City Hall and urged Johnson tackle the rising housing
crisis by building more council homes, controlling private rents and calling
off the proposed demolition of properties on up to 70 London estates.
If
Tory plans to reduce the total household benefit cap to £23,000 as promised
large families would be forced to move away from London and the out of the
south-east.
Leading
the march as it crossed Tower Bridge in driving rain was Jasmin Stone, from
Newham in east London.
The
young single mother said skyrocketing rents and unscrupulous landlords had
already forced a number of her friends from the capital they can no longer
afford.
She
said: “I’ve already lost quite a few of them; it’s extremely unfair that young
people cannot afford to stay in the city they love and grew up in.”
The Focus E15 young mothers who are
successfully fighting plans to force them out of London took pride of place on
the march.
Immediately
after the march a group of young activists broke away and succeeded in
occupying part of what is left of the giant Aylesbury Estate near the Elephant
and Castle.
Houses
on the Chartridge House block have been opened and were occupied overnight. The
occupiers held an assembly on Sunday and asked for neighbours, squatters, and
everyone who wants to, to join them. There are homes here for hundreds, lying
empty because of the greed of developers and bribed politicians.
The
Aylesbury Estate is one of the largest “social housing” complexes in Europe. It
was built in the 1960s-70s with 2700 homes. Because it sits on prime inner
London real estate, it is being socially cleansed of its working class
inhabitants, in a saga that has gone on for over 15 years now.
Tenants
have been evicted, often moved out miles from central London. A rash of ugly
identikit yuppy blocks have been built on part of the site.
There
was a big police presence at the start of the occupation yesterday, including a
helicopter and photographers, but not TSG riot police. But after a few hours
all the police left, saying that they were treating this as a legal protest and
would not try to storm the building.
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