Hammersmith Law Centre
Man from Iran
Submitted by hangbitch on 4 July 2007 - 5:59pm. asylum seekers | Hammersmith Law Centre | immigrants | voluntary sector funding cutsThe Hammersmith Law Centre will lose 60% of its funding in cuts voted for by the Tory Hammersmith and Fulham Council, which is fairly disastrous.
This site is adding interviews with people who have used the law centre for legal help and advice over the years. Law centre clients are often immigrants and people seeking asylum. They're often from places the west is hostile to: Afghanistan, Iran and so on.
If you click on the 'read more' link below, links to all other articles and interviews on this topic will appear in the menu to the right.
Here's another guy who went to the law centre for help negotiating immigration law and the Home Office. He's from Iran. He's a witty, gentle type who is almost happy to talk about life as an Middle Eastern immigrant in these delicate times. He's a little reluctant to release personal details, like his name.
'Maybe I am too paranoid,' he grins. 'You can worry too much about them saying things out there about you.'
That is true, although there are times when paranoia is probably the rational option. This guy, now greying a little, did a bit of political organising in Iran when he was younger. He seems to have come to the attention of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, or the Iranian authorities, at least, as a result. 'I mean, I was helping some students, and I helped some people do some political things... um, like taking part in meetings, organising meetings... so I decided to stay here.'
Tory fibs
Submitted by hangbitch on 19 June 2007 - 5:47pm. Hammersmith and Fulham Council | Hammersmith Law Centre | voluntary sector funding cutsHangbitch was (were?) in close attendance at last night's public meeting/debate on the Hammersmith and Fulham Tory Council's cuts to voluntary sector funding. Will post a report on the event shortly (update: here it is), but in the meantime, here are some photos to enjoy.
Your man on the right getting a Guinness in during the debate is Tory Councillor and Evening Standard hack Harry Phibbs.
What a cracker he was.
Isn't Phibbs the greatest name a politician ever had? Ten points for pushing on with it.
PS: could the worthy Tories who keeping emailing/spamming us with the news that abortion rates up are get lost, please? We are pro-abortion and you are not, so probably spam is going to PISS US OFF.
Many thanks.
Immigrants are nice. Tories are tossers
Submitted by hangbitch on 14 June 2007 - 7:43pm. asylum | Hammersmith and Fulham Council Tories | Hammersmith Law Centre | immigrants | Iraq | Jordan | Salah Almesaouil | SyriaAs we have been reporting, the Hammersmith Law Centre will lose 60% of its funding in cuts voted for by the Tory Hammersmith and Fulham Council. Thousands of poorer people in the borough will lose access to the free legal advice and representation that the centre has provided for nearly 30 years.
This site is adding interviews with people who have gone to the law centre for legal help and advice over the years. Law centre clients are often immigrants and people seeking asylum.
Below, law centre client Salah Almesaouil talks a bit about moving to London. He has been a client of the law centre for some years, and had help with Home Office and housing problems.
Salah Almesaouil is a small, witty guy from Syria who lives with his wife and eight young children in a three-bedroom council flat in a West London block called Hamlet Gardens. 'Good flat,' he says, as his four littlest kids stampede through it. 'Bit small, maybe, for ten of us living here. Bit small.'
He's not complaining about his general direction of travel, though: the UK remains a land of opportunity as far as he is concerned, and he and his kids are taking it.
His three eldest - teenagers Heba, Mohamad and Hamza - are doing well in school, particularly in the scary subjects: Heba is studying A-level chemistry, physics and maths, Mohamad, is taking A-levels in maths, applied science and computing, and Hamza is sitting GCSEs in science, double science, maths, English language and literature, RE, design and technology, history, French and Arabic.
They want to be doctors and computer engineers and that kind of thing. Almesauouil is a happy Dad.
Working on...
Submitted by hangbitch on 7 June 2007 - 7:16pm. debate | Hammersmith and Fulham Council | Hammersmith Law Centre | Polly Toynbee | voluntary sector cuts...more interviews with Hammersmith Law Centre clients as we speak.
News in the meantime: on 18 June at 7.30pm, Polly Toynbee and others will be taking part in a debate in Hammersmith on the issue of funding in the voluntary sector. The event is being organised by the Hammersmith Law Centre, who, as readers of this site will know, are having 60% of their own funding removed from them by those charming Tories at Hammersmith and Fulham Council.
The debate will be held at the Irish Centre is on Blacks Road, Hammersmith. Twill be a public meeting, all, so get yourselves along.
You can read more about the Hammersmith and Fulham Voluntary Sector Funding Campaign here.
Hammersmith law
Submitted by hangbitch on 22 May 2007 - 8:24pm. Claudia Fernandas | Hammersmith and Fulham Conservatives | Hammersmith Law Centre | law centre clients | Vanildo FernandasThe Hammersmith Law Centre is due to lose 60% of its funding in cuts voted for by the Tory Hammersmith and Fulham Council. Thousands of poorer people in the borough will lose access to the free legal advice, support and representation that the centre has provided for nearly 30 years.
This site is now adding interviews with people who have gone to the law centre for legal help and advice over the years.
Below, law centre clients Vanildo and Claudia Fernandas explain why they sought help from the law centre. They took advice from the law centre this year about emergency housing and benefits.
Vanildo Fernandas was waiting for a bus on Fulham Palace Road very late one night last October when two men walked over and attacked him with a couple of knives. 'Maybe for a robbery,' Vanildo's wife Claudia says. 'I don't know what they did it for. He was waiting by himself for the bus. There was one Iranian guy and one Afghan guy.'
Vanildo, 29, had just finished a night-shift in the restaurant kitchen he'd been working in for about a fortnight. 'When he finished the night, he called me to say that he would be home in about 30 minutes,' Claudia says. Needless to say, he wasn't. 'They cut him everywhere – here, on his throat (they cut his oesophagus open), on his arms, and down his chest. There is nerve problems in his arms now. He has to also have food and drink through a tube in his stomach [because the cut to his oesophagus is still open]. It is [going to take a long time] for him to heal. He is frightened, very difficult. I worry about leaving him alone. There is, um, how do you say it, his imagination?'
Annoying government
Submitted by hangbitch on 22 April 2007 - 4:15pm. Afghan hijackers | Anti poverty act | Hammersmith and Fulham Tories | Hammersmith Law Centre
The Hammersmith Law Centre has made a near-30-year career of successfully challenging government and local government on behalf of local people. Now, the Hammersmith Law Centre is facing a 60% cut in the grant that it gets from Hammersmith and Fulham Council.
This isn't the first time that the law centre has found itself threatened with closure. This article continues interviews with people who are interested to know why the law centre is in the firing line again.
There are links to the first reports on the Hammersmith Law Centre and voluntary sector funding cuts issue at Hammersmith and Fulham at the end of this story.
Photo: John Fitzgerald and Sheona York
There are certainly days when founding Hammersmith Law Centre lawyer and Law Centres Federation Chair John Fitzpatrick wonders if the centre's famed habit of confronting political nobilities led to Hammersmith and Fulham council whacking £120,000 from the centre's grant this year.
Fitzgerald, who sits on the centre's management committee and teaches at the University of Kent, isn't particularly keen to gratify anybody's thundering paranoia: on the other hand, he feels that a number of the centre's recent cases may have lost it points with whoever it is out there who keeps tabs on prospective troublemakers.
Chief among these cases was the recent and much-publicised court case of the group of nine Afghan men who hijacked a plane in 2000, and held more than 150 crew and passengers hostage in an airport standoff that went on for some days. The men argued that they took this extreme action because they had no choice and wanted to escape the Taliban. They were jailed, but freed on appeal.
Hammersmith and Fulham Tory watch
Submitted by hangbitch on 19 April 2007 - 5:26pm. Hammersmith and Fulham Conservatives | Hammersmith and Fulham Council | Hammersmith Law Centre | voluntary sector funding cutsHangbitch New Statesman watch on the Hammersmith and Fulham Tories
Hammersmith and Fulham Conservatives start on the heart of the voluntary sector
Submitted by hangbitch on 13 April 2007 - 4:51pm. Council | funding cuts | Hammersmith and Fulham Conservatives | Hammersmith Law Centre | Horn of Africa | immigrantsIntroduction:
Hammersmith and Fulham's Conservative council is planning to cut funding to a mighty range of longstanding local voluntary groups. That’s no big surprise from a Conservative council, although it was certainly delivered as one. Some groups have only just heard that they’re about to lose their funding, and mostly, they’ve heard it from each other. The council has not been too quick to let these applicants know that their money has gone.
The worst hit by far is the Hammersmith Law Centre – a longstanding charitable organisation that has been providing Hammersmith’s community and voluntary sectors with advantageous legal advice since 1979, and tormenting various council kaisers for about as long. The Law Centre is staffed by 12 lawyers - 12 experienced persons who know the law, continue to set national legal precedents with their work, give free legal advice to charities, unions, right-minded council officers and anybody else who suspects that the council or government office that they’re having to deal with is talking neocon garbage. It is perhaps needless to say that the Law Centre poses a problem for the council.
And so it is that the Law Centre is due to lose 60% of its funding. The Tories will try to point out (as their officer report on voluntary sector funding to the council’s Cabinet on Monday 16 April does, all over the place) that they are not cutting funding to the voluntary sector as such – they are merely redistributing it. Alas for council leader Stephen Greenhalgh, it is hard to mask this sort of surgery. The truth is that if you get rid of the Hammersmith Law Centre, you lobotomise the community and voluntary sector in Hammersmith and Fulham. You don’t need a lot of brain to get it around that one.
We will be looking at this issue in more depth over the coming weeks and talking to more of the people who are affected. This first story begins the discussion.
Note: voluntary groups affected by the proposed funding cuts will hold a protest at a Hammersmith and Fulham council cabinet meeting on Monday 16 April at 7pm in the Assembly Hall in the Town Hall on Kings Street in Hammersmith. This is a public meeting, and the affected voluntary groups would welcome support.
Hammersmith Law Centre
The Hammersmith Law Centre discovered that it was about to lose 60% of its funding not long before Easter. Staff there appear to have found out about on the day that long-time centre lawyer Tony Pullen just happened to see the council report that recommended the cut.
The centre is on the mailing list for Hammersmith and Fulham council agendas, and the agenda for the April 16 2007 cabinet meeting had come through the door, as the council agendas usually do. Pullen decided to thumb through the agenda - mostly, it seems, for the hell of it. He noticed that there was a report in the agenda called 'Voluntary Sector Funding, 2007 to 2009.' 'I thought 'that looks interesting,' Pullen says, raising his eyebrows.
Indeed it was. The report, which is still due to go before the Monday 16 April Cabinet meeting, recommended a £159,000 cut to the Centre's annual £261,000 grant – the most substantial in a list of very substantial hits. Pullen found himself a little flustered. 'We hadn't had any warning, and we hadn't heard anything from the council. This report was saying that we were going to lose 60% of our funding, and the cabinet meeting (where a vote would be taken on that recommendation) was only a few days away when I saw that report. I don't know how we would have found out if I hadn't seen that report.'

