Former Delhi High Court Judge questions eviction of beggars for CWG

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): Former Delhi High Court Chief Justice A. P Shah has criticized the State Government for evicting beggars and other ”have-nots” from Delhi.

He was speaking after the Housing and Land Rights Network (HLRN), a non-government body, released its progress report on the government”s intended plans in the run-up to the October 2010 Common Wealth Games.

“Authorities are cleaning street vendors, rickshaw pullers and other informal sector workers of the road in the process depriving thousands of the urban poor of their livelihood,” said Shah.

Miloon Kothari, one of the panelists, said the holding of the Games contravened India”s Constitutional.

Kothari said the excessive costs involved in staging the games event ignore the reality of high levels of poverty, hunger, inequality, homelessness and malnutrition.

The HLRN report has posed several questions such as the rationale for spending billions of rupees on the event vis-à-vis the key pre and post event general recommendations and allied suggestions.

Human rights activists have raised several questions covering various dimensions of the Commonwealth Games, especially the level of expenditure on a one-time sporting event and actual delivery of benefits to the masses

Apart from Justice Shah and Kothari, others who took part in the panel discussion were Amitabh Kundu, Director of Hazards Centre and Dunu Roy of HLRN. (ANI)

Homeless housing projects launched in Brisbane

There has been progress on two major projects to reduce homelessness in Brisbane.

The not-for-profit Brisbane Housing Company has started work on a 10-storey affordable housing complex in Fortitude Valley.

It includes more than 80 low-rent units and a Red Cross support service.

Brisbane Lord Mayor Campbell Newman says some of the flats will be reserved for young people.

“We need to make sure that as this city prospers, that people don’t get left behind,” he said.

The Federal Government contributed more than $14 million.

Housing Minister Tanya Plibersek was at today’s launch.

“It’s very exciting because it’s a well designed building in a terrific location,” he said.

The Federal and State governments also announced that a 146 unit development for homeless people will be built at Hope Street in South Brisbane.

Mt Isa homeless need to make ‘long-term’ steps

A Mount Isa priest in north-west Queensland says he is trying to find accommodation for a large group of homeless Indigenous people who are living on land near his church.

Father Michael Lowcock says around 30 people have been living near the church for the last few months and he has been offering them meals and showers.

He says while homeless people can access assistance – some are choosing not to.

I think part of the issue is whether they want to find a place to live, because I’ve been talking to them about to trying to go and register with the Department of Housing, they need to make those steps, a lot of it is getting them to make those steps themselves rather than doing it for them,” he said.

“In the end when you do it for them and they’re probably not going to care for the place, a lot of it is trying to get the long-term view of make those steps themselves.”

Father Lowcock says homelessness in the city is a complex issue and with the end of the wet season homeless people will move on from the church.

“From now on I presume that most of the rain is gone and that people will probably spread out more to outer areas, from outside of town,” he said.

‘Under 1 roof’ program to help homeless

A group of not-for-profit agencies have joined forces in a bid to reduce the number of homeless people living on Brisbane’s streets.

Ten organisations have formed the “Under 1 Roof” consortium to offer targeted short and longer term services to homeless people.

It is estimated up to 5,000 people across Brisbane are homeless.

Mission Australia Queensland director Tony Stevenson said coordinating assistance including supplying meals, education and mental health services will provide a better outcome for clients.

“We can do a much better job, we can join together to really understand what each person’s needs are,” he said.

“It will mean that wherever people go to any of the services then we’ll have a much better package of support available to them.”

Under the program a homeless person will be able to go to any one of the ten agencies and then be referred to another member of the group for extra support services.

A dedicated team of case workers will come together to oversee that person’s transition to permanent housing.

“Under 1 Roof” project worker Fiona Caniglia said the group cannot solve the issue of homelessness on its own, but it hopes to contribute to both State and Federal Government targets to reduce Brisbane’s homeless population.

“People can walk through any of those doors and trigger a response,” she said.

139 Club

One of the organisations joining the consortium is the 139 Club in New Farm which provides drop-in services.

Manager Rod Kelly supports the joint approach because it means agencies will be able to provide a more tailored response to each client’s needs than in the past.

“The way it used to work is someone would present to one agency and then just get a hit and miss like referral to another agency that they assume or think might be able to help,” he said.

The Club does not have a drug and alcohol worker to work with homeless people, but Mr Kelly said the new system will allow case workers to directly refer someone to another consortium member, the Queensland Injectors’ Health Network, to get support.

“We’ll be able to sit down as a big team of all agencies with different expertise to work out a plan to really move this person from the street to having their own roof,” he said.

Mr Kelly said the group is set to start a trial of the model with up to five high-needs homeless people using the current resources of the group’s members.

David Valpiani, 48, was once homeless but he is now studying two hours each week to prepare for life as a university student.

Mr Valpiani said the support he received from both Mission Australia and the 139 Club gave him a push in the right direction.

After helping to create a communal garden at the 139 Club he said he became interested in learning.

“It just gives you incentive to get off your backside and go and do it,” he said.

He is one person who is reaping the benefits of a united approach to tackle homelessness.

Homeless funding boost

The Federal Government is to spend almost $800,000 on improving accommodation for the homeless at East Perth.

The money will come from the Federal Government’s Jobs Fund.

The Federal Housing Minister Tanya Plibersek says the money will be used to improve energy efficiency and environmental sustainability in Saint Bartholomew’s House Lime Street Project.

She says she expects the project to create jobs.

“The employment outcomes of this project are very important,” she said.

“We expect that the Lime Street Project will create or retain 73 jobs, 12 work experience positions and eight traineeships or apprenticeships.”

Minister says affordable housing is value for money

Seniors and people with a disability will be offered discounted rent in 26 new homes to be built in Lismore.

The Federal Minister for Housing, Tanya Plibersek says rents will be fixed at 20 percent below the market rate.

She says the $5-million project on the corner of Dibbs and Dalziel streets will be developed in conjunction with Baptist Community Services.

The Minister says it will go some way to relieving housing stress in the region.

“This program and other programs like our Nation Building Economic Stimulus Social Housing Program, which will build 116 new homes in Ballina, Casino, Grafton and Lismore will begin to make a difference,” Ms Plibersek said.

“I don’t think there are any overnight solutions to the housing stress, but I hope our contribution will begin to make a difference,” she said.

The Minister says she’s confident homes built under the National Rental Affordibility Scheme represent value for taxpayers’ money.

The Government has been accused of wasting money by paying too much for school renovations under its Building the Education Revolution scheme.

But Ms Plibersek says housing figures for New South Wales tell a different story.

“We anticipated that homes would cost around $300,000 each for a home and land, and in fact in NSW we’re getting much better value than that. We’re seeing homes come in between (a) 250 and 270,000 dollar average, which is pretty good for a home-and-land package when you average out costs right across the state,” she said.

Bondi Pavilion squatters win eviction reprieve

A group of homeless men has won a temporary reprieve in their fight to sleep at the Bondi Pavilion, in Sydney’s east.

The group has won the right to take their case to the High Court, which will then decide if there is merit in the case being heard.

Earlier this month the homeless men lost an appeal in the Supreme Court over their right to live at the Bondi Pavilion.

Spokesman Kevin St Alder says there is relief that Waverley Council has agreed to let the group stay until the matter is finalised.

“They were just so happy that the court didn’t just dismiss it outright,” he said.

“We would have been forced into a situation of total fear and marginalisation by having to move by midnight tonight or the police and/or council [would] come down with their jack boots on tomorrow to evict us out of the area.

“So it gives them some of their dignity back they can sleep soundly tonight.”

Help at hand for Hunter homeless

Support services for homeless people in the Hunter Valley have been boosted with two specialist Centrelink workers employed in the region.

There are 90 Community Engagement Officers across the country as part of the Federal Government’s plan to halve homelessness by 2020.

The officers will work with non-government organisations including drug and alcohol rehabilitation services, accommodation centres and mental health units.

A Hunter-based Community Engagement Officer, Amy Smith, says she has been trained to identify people who are at risk of homelessness.

“It’s getting out into the community and being that face in the community, so trying to guide people into employment opportunities, in accordance with their individual abilities, rather than just starting and maintaining Centrelink payments for them, rather than just coming into the office to access Centrelink services,” she said.

More resources sought to back up hostel plan

The Western Australian Opposition’s spokeswoman for child protection has called for more than just a hostel to be built for troubled youth in Carnarvon.

Sue Ellery visited the town last Friday and says she is concerned about the number of young children roaming the streets at night.

There has already been widespread support shown for a proposed boarding school-type hostel.

Ms Ellery has welcomed the idea but says more money is needed for government and support agencies.

“There needs to be more domestic violence resources in town, in Carnarvon, not just in Geraldton,” she said.

“What I’m talking about is a coordinated cross-government cross-community sector plan, well resourced.”

Broome launches a return to country programme

Aboriginal people living on the streets of Broome are being offered free bus tickets to get them back to their communities.

Hundreds of Aboriginal people sleep rough in the town’s parks and sand-dunes in conditions the local Shire has described as third world.

The shire last week called their living conditions a disgrace and said children were being put at risk of abuse.

CentreCare and government agencies have now pooled funds to provide a free bus ticket home.

Kimberley CentreCare Manager Trish Jones says she is expecting 200 people to be repatriated in coming weeks.

“I am anxious and deeply concerned that poverty-stricken and destitute families, especially children, are being placed in vulnerable, at -risk situations.”

“They’re camping in third world conditions. This is a small example of how one small, not-for-profit organisation can quickly make a difference to a difficult problem here in Broome.”

Ms Jones says Centrelink has agreed to pay for people’s bus tickets home.

“It’s made very clear to every client that this is a once-off thing, and should you abuse it, then we’re not a position to help you again.”

Already, six people have been returned to communities across the north-west.

A further 200 are expected to be repatriated in coming weeks.

US library bans ‘offensive bodily odours’ from entering!

London, Apr 15 (ANI): An American library has banned people with ‘offensive bodily odours’ from using its facilities.

Because of an increase in homelessness along with the winter weather, large numbers of people are crowding into libraries during the day to stay warm.

Therefore, poor personal hygiene has joined the more familiar prohibitions at the Schaumburg Township District Library in suburban Chicago, such as running, talking loudly or carrying an uncovered drink.
According to Stephanie Sarnoff, the library’s director, the aroma would have to be so overpowering that it interfered with others’ use of the Schaumburg Township District Library.

Stephanie said that the decision was based on complaints from library users about a homeless person but claimed that it could just as easily apply to someone wearing too much perfume.

“People who use libraries are usually very understanding about the foibles of others,” The Telegraph quoted her, as telling the Chicago Tribune.

“So when one or more library users complain that another person’s hygiene is of such poor quality that it is prohibiting them from pursuing what they want to do, their problem becomes our problem,” she added. (ANI)

British police clash with G20 protesters

Police clashed with demonstrators gathered around the Bank of England in the heart of London’s financial centre on Wednesday during a day of protest against the G20 summit.

Riot police staged baton charges to try to disperse several hundred people protesting against a financial system they said had robbed the poor to benefit the rich.

Demonstrators earlier attacked a nearby branch of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), shattering three windows.

Rescued by the government in October, RBS and former boss Fred Goodwin, who controversially refused to give up a pension of 700,000 ($1 million), became lightning rods for public anger in Britain over banker excess blamed for the financial crisis.

During the protests one man died after he collapsed and stopped breathing. Police said they tried to resuscitate him but that they came under a hail of bottles. The man was taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital where he was pronounced dead.

A police source said it was likely the man died from a medical condition but that a post-mortem was needed.

The protests in London’s City financial area coincided with a G20 meeting of the world’s leading and emerging economies.

Protesters hurled paint bombs and bottles, chanting: “Our streets! Our banks!”

RBS said in a statement it was “aware of the violence” outside its branch and “had already taken the precautionary step” of closing central City branches.

As dusk fell, police charged a hard core of anti-capitalist demonstrators in an attempt to disperse them before nightfall. Bottles flew through the air towards police lines and police on horseback stood by ready to intervene.

Some protesters set fire to an effigy of a banker hanging from a lamp post.

Police brought out dogs as they tried to channel the few hundred remaining protesters through the narrow streets surrounding the classical, stone-clad Bank of England.

Police said 63 protesters had been arrested by late evening and at least one officer was taken to hospital for treatment, although he was not believed to be seriously hurt.

Some 4,000 protesters had thronged outside the central bank. A Gucci store nearby was closed and had emptied its windows.

Demonstrations were planned for Thursday at the venue in east London where world leaders will discuss plans to fight the financial crisis, police said.

HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE

During Wednesday’s protests, demonstrators marched behind models of the “four horsemen of the apocalypse” representing financial crimes, war, climate change and homelessness.

Some threw eggs at police and chanted, “Build a bonfire, put the bankers on the top”. Others shouted “Jump” and “Shame on you” at financial sector workers watching the march from office block windows.

“I am angry at the hubris of the government, the hubris of the bankers,” said Jean Noble, a 60-year-old from Blackburn in northern England.

“I am here on behalf of the poor, those who are not going to now get their pension or who have lost their houses while these fat cats keep their bonuses, hide their money in tax havens and go and live where nobody can touch them.”

A smaller demonstration against Britain’s military role in Iraq and Afghanistan attracted several hundred people in Trafalgar Square, not far from parliament.

The protests, which brought together anti-capitalists, environmentalists, anti-war campaigners and others, were meant to mark what demonstrators called “Financial Fools’ Day” — a reference to April Fool’s Day which falls on April 1.

Police stopped a military-style armoured vehicle with the word “RIOT” printed on the front and a police spokesman said its 11 occupants were arrested for having fake police uniforms.

Marianne Faithfull’s life to be turned into film

London, Mar 14 (ANI): The life of singer Marianne Faithfull, the real wild girl of rock, is to be told in a film.

At a time of her life, Faithfull, who once dated Mick Jagger, sank into heroin addiction and homelessness.

She published an autobiography in 1994.

And, now she has agreed to have her life transformed into a film.

“It won’t happen right away but we have found a director who I trust who wants to make a film of the book,” The BBC quoted her, as saying.

However, Faithfull, who is now releasing her 22nd album, said she did not want a say in casting an actress to play her.

She said: “I’m not getting involved. I’ll read the script, when it’s ready, which isn’t for a long time, and then I’ll leave it to the director and the actress he chooses.

“I don’t want to have much to do with it. I want to read the script and like the script and then I’m going to let go of it and let them do what they want. That’s the way to do it.”

Now 62, Faithfull added that her life was “a great story”.

Educated in a convent, she was discovered by the Rolling Stones’ manager at 17.

She was once found wearing nothing but a rug during an infamous police search of Stones guitarist Keith Richards’ house in 1967.

The singer spent two years living on the streets of London in the 1970s, addicted to heroin. (ANI)

Michelle Obama blasted over black designer wear ‘snub’

Chicago, Jan 27 (ANI): US First Lady Michelle Obama has come under fire for not wearing an inaugural design by a black fashion designer.

Amnau Eele, co-founder of the Black Artists Association, has told fashion industry publication Women’s Wear Daily that she is planning to “file a formal appeal” with Michelle’s office about the lack of a black designer.

“It’s fine and good if you want to be all ‘Kumbaya’ and ‘We are the World’ by representing all different countries,” Eele is quoted as saying at wwd.com, the magazine’s Web site.

“But if you are going to have Isabel Toledo do the inauguration dress, and Jason Wu do the evening gown, why not have Kevan Hall, B Michael, Stephen Burrows or any of the other black designers do something, too?” she added.

While in an interview with the Sun-Times, Eele said that she wants the 45-year-old to know there are other, lesser-known designers that the First Lady should take a look at.

“You know, I have an issue that every day I meet young black designers that are facing homelessness, they can’t buy fabric, they can’t get the things they need,” she said.

“We have qualified designers in the community. A young man like Michael Knight (of Project Runway) — surely you could have worn a scarf by him, a Tshirt, a handbag,” Eele added.

Michelle wore an outfit designed by Cuba-born Isabel Toledo for the daytime inaugural events. She paired it with Jimmy Choo pumps, purchased at Chicago’s Ikram boutique, and leather gloves by mainstream retailer J. Crew.

For the inaugural balls, she wore a one-shoulder, white gown designed by Taiwan-born designer Jason Wu. (ANI)

Stress looming from credit crisis costing NHS over £2bn a year

London, Oct 25 : Stress looming from global financial crisis, has cost NHS more than 2 billion pounds a year, according to a new report.

Treating health problems arising out of wide range of domestic woes, from divorce to neighbour disputes, following financial crisis is costing huge amounts to NHS.

The researchers questioned 5,000 adults in England and Wales about so-called “civil-law problems” for which a remedy could be sought in court, including consumer disputes, employment issues, homelessness, domestic violence, disputes over benefits, child custody, immigration or mental health, and accidents where someone was to blame.

It showed 34 per cent of people said they had suffered at least one such problem.

Almost 16 per cent of the problems identified led to physical ill health, while 27 per cent were said to have fell for stress-related conditions.

As many as three million adults across the UK had problems with debt or disputed bills.

Out of which, 21 per cent said they had suffered stress-related ill health.

Among those whose debts caused ill health, 22 per cent saw their GP, costing the NHS an average of £125 per patient.

The study was carried out by the Legal Services Research Centre, an arm of the Legal Services Commission, which oversees Britain”s £1 billion-a-year legal aid budget.

The financial woes have cost to the NHS of 15 million pounds to 20 million pounds,

“This figure would more than double were problems concerning housing added, such as having mortgage or rent arrears,” the Telegraph quoted Dr Nigel Balmer, a co-author of the study and the principal researcher.

“Many of these problems are likely to increase in volume and severity if economic conditions deteriorate, but further co-ordination of health and advice services could help to address complex problems more efficiently, he added.

The report concluded: “Associations have been found between ill health and poor and overcrowded housing, homelessness, debt, discrimination and problems with employment.” (ANI)