logo
Canal needs to be safer, say boaters after assaults

Canal needs to be safer, say boaters after assaults

Yahoo6 hours ago
"It's the same as the city, there's a feeling of degradation about it in places, which saddens me."
John Ball has been mooring in Nottingham city centre on his narrowboat for many years, and says the canal has changed in that time.
He spoke to the BBC following three separate attacks along and near the canal in less than a month.
The first was against a woman who was raped on 20 June, then another woman was sexually assaulted on 6 July, then a man was seriously assaulted on 17 July.
John says he has felt threatened himself at times, but he continues mooring in the city centre out of defiance.
'Violent and aggressive'
"If people like me stop mooring here then it will get progressively worse," says John, who is 71.
"It will finish up with more and more people drinking and doing drugs, and being violent and aggressive."
John says he has experienced vandalism himself - someone unhooked the protective fenders from the side of his boat and threw them in the water.
He pays for a permanent mooring at a nearby marina, so he could stay there, but he is determined to keep using the canal.
"I won't stop doing it, because it winds me up and it annoys me as much as anything else," he says.
John isn't the only person to be concerned. The Canal and River Trust (CRT) - the charity responsible for maintaining England's waterways - says it has been "shocked" by the recent assaults.
The charity said it had been in discussions with Nottingham City Council and Nottinghamshire Police.
"We're carrying out regular clean-ups and addressing issues such as unlicensed boats, but we want to work with partner organisations that have the powers and skills to deal with the broader issues we've seen recently, such as criminal activity, fly-tipping and homelessness," a spokesman said.
John said he had noticed a problem with unlicensed boats himself. Boaters like him have to pay an annual licence to the CRT which allows them to use canals - but some boaters have been mooring along the canal illegally.
"I walked in from Castle Marina the other day and of the 19 boats I passed, two of them had licences on them, and they were the two charity boats run by the local authority," he said.
The CRT theoretically has the power to remove unlicensed boats from canals, but in reality, doing so is difficult.
"This is always very much a last resort, at the end of a long legal process, and where we've repeatedly tried to resolve the issues with the boater without success," said the CRT spokesman.
Multiple women have previously told the BBC they feel too scared to walk or run along the canal, and that more police patrols would help.
Nottinghamshire Police said its officers were "maintaining a high-visibility presence in the area" following the recent attacks.
Supt Chris Pearson, area commander for the City Division, said: "Our neighbourhood policing team for the city centre continue to carry out routine patrols around our canal towpaths as part of their policing activity.
"This is both uniformed and plain-clothed patrols.
"Violence against women and girls is a force priority and we will continue to work with our partners to improve the safety of our canal network."
Nottingham City Council was also asked to comment but did not want to.
John believes the canal would be safer if more licensed boaters like him started mooring there.
"Realistically, more people need to use it," he said.
"You can put people [police officers] on the ground but they haven't got the resources."
Fellow narrowboater Ian Furmidge agrees there is safety in numbers.
He normally moors his narrowboat in Market Bosworth, but was passing through Nottingham city centre when he spoke to the BBC.
"All towns and cities and urban areas come with a sense of trepidation, and there is safety in numbers, you do look for groups of boats," said Ian, who is 62.
"If I was mooring here and there were no other boats at all I'd be quite nervous and probably wouldn't stop.
"We need people in the city centres."
John has certainly not been deterred from mooring in the city centre by the recent attacks.
"It's my home town and I'm not going to be pushed out of it by people behaving in a bad way," he said.
Follow BBC Nottingham on Facebook, on X, or on Instagram. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@bbc.co.uk or via WhatsApp on 0808 100 2210.
'It no longer feels safe to run next to the canal'
Man charged with rape after city centre attack
Man in hospital after serious canal path assault
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former Tory MP appears in court charged with having false passport
Former Tory MP appears in court charged with having false passport

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Former Tory MP appears in court charged with having false passport

A former Conservative MP has appeared in court accused of having a false passport during the time she was sitting in Parliament. Katie Wallis, 41, of Butetown, Cardiff, the MP for Bridgend in South Wales from 2019 to 2024, became the first openly transgender MP in the House of Commons in 2022. Wallis, who uses female pronouns and was previously known as Jamie, appeared before Cardiff Crown Court on Monday representing herself. The charge was not read out in court, but the defendant previously appeared in Cardiff Magistrates' Court accused of having a false passport 'without reasonable excuse'. Wallis was alleged to be in possession of the document in April 2022, while she was still serving as a Conservative MP. Judge Tracey Lloyd-Clarke, the Recorder of Cardiff, adjourned the hearing for Wallis to either seek legal representation or make an informed decision on representing herself. The judge said: 'I'm going to adjourn this for a short period of time to enable you to decide whether you want to get at least some initial advice.' Wallis will next appear on August 15. Wallis, who appeared in court wearing a pink jacket, was released on bail until the next hearing.

Palestine Action terror ban made UK ‘international outlier', High Court told
Palestine Action terror ban made UK ‘international outlier', High Court told

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Palestine Action terror ban made UK ‘international outlier', High Court told

Banning Palestine Action as a terror organisation had the hallmarks of a 'blatant abuse of power' and made the UK an 'international outlier', the High Court has heard. The group's co-founder Huda Ammori is making a bid to legally challenge Home Secretary Yvette Cooper's decision to proscribe the group under anti-terror laws, announced after the group claimed an action which saw two Voyager planes damaged at RAF Brize Norton on June 20. The ban means that membership of, or support for, the direct action group is now a criminal offence punishable by up to 14 years in prison. On July 4, Ms Ammori failed in a High Court bid to temporarily block the ban coming into effect, with the Court of Appeal dismissing a challenge over that decision less than two hours before the proscription came into force on July 5. The case returned to the High Court in London on Monday, where lawyers for Ms Ammori asked a judge to grant the green light for a full legal challenge against the decision to ban the group, saying it was an 'unlawful interference' with freedom of expression. Raza Husain KC said: 'We say the proscription of Palestine Action is repugnant to the tradition of the common law and contrary to the ECHR (European Convention on Human Rights).' The barrister continued: 'The decision is so extreme as to render the UK an international outlier.' Mr Husain added: 'The decision to proscribe Palestine Action had the hallmarks of an authoritarian and blatant abuse of power.' 'The consequences are not just limited to arrest,' Mr Husain later said, telling the court there was 'rampant uncertainty' in the aftermath of the ban. Blinne Ni Ghralaigh KC, also for Ms Ammori, later said: 'The impacts (of proscription) have already been significant.' She continued: 'Dozens and dozens of people have been arrested for protesting, seated and mostly silent protest.' The Home Office is defending the legal challenge. Previously, Ben Watson KC, for the Home Office, said Palestine Action could challenge the Home Secretary's decision at the Proscribed Organisations Appeal Commission (POAC), a specialist tribunal, rather than at the High Court. However, Mr Husain told the court on Monday that the POAC was not 'convenient nor effective' in this case. He continued: 'It would be quite absurd to say that we should tolerate the consequences of the proscription… even if it is unlawful, and just go to POAC. 'That is an absurd position.' Ms Cooper announced plans to proscribe Palestine Action on June 23, stating that the vandalism of the two planes, which police said caused an estimated £7 million of damage, was 'disgraceful'. More than 100 people were arrested across the country during demonstrations this weekend protesting against the proscription, with protests held in London, Manchester, Edinburgh, Bristol and Truro on Saturday. Saturday's arrests brought the total number of people arrested since the ban came into force to more than 200, with more than 72 arrested across the UK last weekend and 29 the week before. The hearing before Mr Justice Chamberlain is due to conclude on Monday. A decision may be given at the end of the hearing, or in writing at a later date.

UK police arrest 6 after protesters descend on a hotel housing asylum seekers
UK police arrest 6 after protesters descend on a hotel housing asylum seekers

Washington Post

time44 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

UK police arrest 6 after protesters descend on a hotel housing asylum seekers

LONDON — A town on the outskirts of London was rocked by protesters who descended on a hotel housing asylum seekers for the second time in four days on Sunday night, amid anger about a migrant accused of sexual assault. Police in the town of Epping said they arrested six people on Sunday, including four suspected of involvement in 'violent disorder' during the previous demonstration on Thursday. Officers patrolled the area around the Bell Hotel throughout the night after issuing an order for the crowds to disperse. Chanting 'Save our kids' and 'Send them home,' more than 100 demonstrators, some brandishing British flags, gathered outside the hotel Sunday evening. The protests escalated as night fell, with flares and projectiles thrown toward police vans blocking the entrance. Police escorted a counter-protester from the area after demonstrators surrounded her. 'Disappointingly we have seen yet another protest, which begun peacefully, escalate into mindless thuggery with individuals again hurting one of our officers and damaging a police vehicle,″ Chief Superintendent Simon Anslow of the Essex Police said in a statement. 'For anyone who thinks we will tolerate their thuggery — think again.'' The protests come amid escalating tensions over the rising number of asylum seekers who are being housed at government expense in hotels around the country. Those pressures flared into days of rioting last month in Northern Ireland after two teenagers were arrested on charges of sexual assault. Violent anti-immigrant protests spread throughout the U.K. last summer after social media users spread misinformation about the identity of the person who attacked a dance class in the northwestern town of Southport, killing three young girls. The attacker was a 17-year-old who was born in the U.K. born in the U.K. to parents from Rwanda, not an asylum seeker as had been rumored. Prime Minister Keir Starmer condemned last year's riots as 'far-right thuggery' as police intervened to stop the violence and expedited the sentencing of those convicted of taking part. Before Sunday's protests in Epping, local police issued an order that allowed them to force demonstrators to remove face coverings. The later issued an order for the demonstrators to leave the area around the hotel. That dispersal order remained in effect until 4 a.m. Monday. The demonstration came after eight police officers were injured on Thursday after a peaceful protest outside the hotel escalated into violence. Police blamed the violence on people from outside the community who 'arrived at the scene intent on causing trouble.' Four of those detained on Sunday were arrested in connection with events that happened during the initial protest, police said. A fifth was arrested on suspicion of causing criminal damage to a police car, while the sixth was arrested for being equipped to cause criminal damage. The protests began after a 38-year-old asylum seeker was charged with sexual assault after allegedly attempting to kiss a 14-year-old girl. The man is being held without bail after he had his first court appearance on July 10. He denies the charges. 'We don't take sides, we arrest criminals and we have a duty to ensure no-one is hurt — plain and simple,″ Anslow said. 'I know the people of Essex know what we're about so I know they won't believe the rubbish circulating online that is designed to do nothing more than inflame tensions and trouble.'' Epping Forest District Council, which provides local government services in the area, condemned the violence but said it had long opposed the central government's decision to use the Bell Hotel to house asylum seekers. 'We have consistently shared concerns with the Home Office that the Bell Hotel is an entirely unsuitable location for this facility and should close,' council Leader Chris Whitbread said in a statement last week. 'We continue to press Home Office officials for the immediate closure of the site and are encouraged that our local MPs are now actively supporting our call.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store