Mumbai

The Mumbai terror attack has probably touched and come close to people everywhere. In this global village, no-one is that distant – and in a busy, vibrant commercial centre like Mumbai there are bound to be numerous connections – some to us here in Hornsey & Wood Green as elsewhere.

For me professionally Mumbai came close on Thursday when a constituent – whose son was injured in the raids there – couldn’t get a visa from the Indian High Commission despite trying all the night and day before.

I rang the Foreign Office and one of my assistants (extremely able and relentless) persevered until we had the right people to phone him and help him. As far as I am aware he got the visa that day and has gone.

I cannot imagine how terrible it must be to have someone you love there and be desperate to get to them – and then try and deal with the bureaucracy. At least it made me feel I was doing something – as opposed to just watching – so am lucky in that regards.

And personally it came a little close too. I went to the hairdresser on Saturday – and the same woman is there for the appointment before me as usual. She told me she had been staying at the Taj when the terrorists struck – but luckily had gone out to dinner. She never went back. Her room was on fire and she had to just leave everything and fly home. How lucky she was. But that’s it isn’t it – the serendipity of timing.

"Pressure builds on Baby P care chief" – The Observer

From today’s paper:

The senior council officer at the centre of the Baby P tragedy will come under intense pressure to resign from her £110,000-a-year job tomorrow, when a report by national inspectors into the failings of Haringey council is presented to the children’s secretary Ed Balls.

Westminster sources said they believed that Sharon Shoesmith, the council’s director of children’s services, would either quit ‘quietly’ of her own accord, or be put under such pressure to leave by government and opposition politicians that she would have no option but to go…

The Liberal Democrat MP Lynne Featherstone, who was a Haringey councillor at the time of the Climbié case, and whose Hornsey and Wood Green constituency covers part of the borough, said that Shoesmith had to stand down or be ousted. ‘She has to go. We cannot have a new start and restore faith in our social services when those who were responsible remain in charge.’

Robert Gorrie, leader of the Liberal Democrats on Haringey Council, says Shoesmith should not receive a ‘cosy deal’. ‘This needs to be done in a way inwhich we are not seeing payment for failure,’ he said. ‘If people are found to have failed in this crisis, we should not be negotiating deals under which they go quietly with a large pay-off.’

Reading the Baby P Serious Case Review

Well, I read the full Serious Case Review into the death of Baby P at the end of the week. I was given sight of this document following the ho ha when Ed Balls appeared to use the Information Commissioner for cover, saying others could not be allowed sight of the review – and then the Information Commissioner went public clearly not happy with being used in this way. Net result – several MPs, myself included, were allowed to see the report.

Access was given on ‘privy council terms’ – political speak for promising to keep the contents confidential, so I can say nothing of what I have read. The reading was done on my own, in an empty room with one table and one one chair and one copy of said document marked ‘confidential’. I sat alone there for two hours. You are not allowed to make notes of its contents – but you are allowed to note your impressions.

What I can say is that having read the document I am even more of the opinion that it would be in the public interest for it to be published – obviously with some parts anonymized and with a tiny – very tiny – bit of editing of any personal information around the family.

Otherwise – how will all those who have an interest or experience or knowledge or expertise be able to judge Ed Balls action when the investigative report comes in on Monday? That report he has said he will publish – but surely the wider audience can only benefit from understanding how resonant the original document is and was.

To this end – I, David Laws (Liberal Democrat Shadow to Ed Balls) and Michael Gove (Conservative Shadow) wrote to Ed Balls at the end of last week asking him to publish the full Serious Case Review. He has since written back to say no.

Mr Balls’s key rationale for his refusal is that a Serious Case Review is for lessons to be learned. He says that if such documents were to be published – then those who contribute to them might feel nervous about doing so in the future and not talk or give their information freely. Utter bunkum!

Far from being a danger, the light of public scrutiny should be an essential safeguard to ensure that these reviews are carried out properly. Because – quite frankly – these reviews are barely ‘independent’ as they are commissioned by the Safeguarding Children board – in this case chaired by Sharon Shoesmith, one of the very people whose own actions are up for questioning. The ‘independent’ person commissioned on this one has already gone public on the fact that he wasn’t given any independent access to people or documents and that the report went to the sub-committee (chaired by Ms Shoesmith) something like five times for ‘correction’.

So public scrutiny should be welcomed, not feared. As we know already that public scrutiny doesn’t put people off saying what happened and their role in it. They did for Laming’s public inquiry and they did in court and as their jobs depend on it. So you should say goodbye to that old myth, ‘we can only find out the truth if we keep it secret’ Mr Balls.

I rate that old chestnut along with the ‘shhhhhhh don’t say anything brigade’ who keep wailing that this will put off decent social workers coming to Haringey. Nooooo – what will put decent, good, hard-working social workers off coming to Haringey is the constant poor management, cover ups, closing of ranks and appalling leadership – or lack of.

So – publish – and be damned. Whoops – that must be what they are afraid of!

Baby P Q & A

Cllr Gail Engert (Lib Dem, shadow spokesperson for children, schools and families) asked a series of 20 questions about Haringey Council’s handling of the Baby P tragedy earlier this week. The Journal has reproduced them – and the answers Gail got – in full.

Liberal responses to terrorism

This speech was given to the London Liberal Democrats conference, 18 November 2006

Thinking back to when I first came to a London Region conference, the idea that it might be held in Liberal Democrat-run Camden and be addressed by a Lib Dem MP from Haringey, would have seemed very implausible!

It’s a tribute to how far we have come, that here we – and I – are.

And it’s not just in this part of North London. Across the country as a whole, there has never been a higher proportion of councillors who are Liberal Democrat councillors than there is now. We’re at an all time record high – both locally and in Westminster. Not bad, I say!

Turning from the present to the future, if there ever was any doubt before the Queen’s Speech, there’s no doubt now that the next year will see much of politics dominated, once again, by terrorism and civil liberties issues.

These are important issues across the whole country, but of course particularly pressing here in London, the scene of 7/7 but also home to a hugely – and wonderfully – diverse population.

Being a London MP, representing a highly diverse constituency – where the so-called ricin plot took place, the issues of terrorism and how to fight it often play on my mind, and that’s what I want to speak about this morning.

About how we can both tackle terrorism and preserve our civil liberties.

There is, so some people claim, a tension or even contradiction between the two. As the Daily Express put it, “It is absurd and dangerous to apply Queensbury rules to measures taken by the authorities … all that matters is success” – though they published that, not in response to any our recent terrorist outrages, but in the 1970s in response to the IRA’s bombings.

These words could however, so easily have been uttered in the last year or so – and indeed many of this Government’s comments are in truth little different. But have we really learnt so little since the 1970s?

For the reality is that the attitude of “we must get the evil-doers at all costs” resulted, in case after case, in evidence forged to suit and innocent people being fitted up. And of course when you jail the innocent you not only punish them wrongly, but it means you let the guilty off scot-free and, as an added bonus, your injustices make it easier for the terrorists to recruit support for their cause.

Hardly being tough on terrorism!

Over-blown rhetoric; abandoning civil liberties; dodgy evidence; abuses making it easier for terrorists to recruit support – sound at all familiar?

Sadly the current Labour Government seems far too often to go for curtailing civil liberties as the first option, not the last resort.

Let me give just one example. It’s one of the cases presented as part of the case for introducing detention without charge for 90 days without charge.

The reality was that the person was actually released before having even been held for the maximum time even under the existing rules. Not much of a case there!

The alternative to Labour’s disregard for civil liberties and the way to effectively tackle terrorism starts with recognising that it would be the perfect material for satirical black humour (if it weren’t so tragic) to so often here politicians say, in response to a terrorist outrage that is intending to provoke, “It’s outrageous. We will never given in to terrorists. Oh ok …we will be provoked then.”

And one of the things terrorists want is to get rid of liberal society. It’s their enemy.

So stripping away our freedoms is not fighting them – it is doing what they want.

And stripping away our freedoms, with ID cards and DNA databases, means pouring resources into keeping track of innocent people rather than tackling terrorists.

What would you rather millions of pounds and thousands of people were poured into? Looking for terrorists? Or keeping tabs on the innocent?

The alternative to Labour’s approach also means recognising that simply saying “terrorists are evil, their acts are inexcusable” doesn’t help understand where their support comes from – and without that understanding, the sources of its support cannot be tacked.

It is one of the standard cliché exchanges of our times:

“X is evil”
“But Y and Z help explain why X did it”
“Oh, you’re just a soft touch – X is evil and you’re just making excuses”

and so on and on.

The problem so often is that, yes – terrorists are evil, but no – not everyone who helps them is so irredeemable that we can’t imagine plausible circumstances under which they would not have helped.

Especially when we remember that “help” often includes behaviour such as turning a blind eye to what someone who knows someone who lives next to someone else is up to.

Terrorism gains strength from consent – explicit or implicit – from a wider circle of people.

Understanding what motivates people to turn a helping hand or to turn a blind eye is what is needed to cut the ground from under terrorists and make it harder for them to operate.

So, no – I don’t think any amount of alienation, poverty, discrimination or exclusion excuses murder, and I’m doubtful how many fewer terrorists murderers there would be if all those were tackled (after all, those in the UK in recent times have been rather more middle class) – but I am sure that those same terrorist murderers find it easier to operate when they are surrounded by people who do suffer from alienation, from poverty and from discrimination.

We need to look to encourage moderates in our Muslim communities, such as by supporting the drives to have more preaching done in English.

We should also recognise that we live in a world of international terrorism and easy communication – the policies of making it easier to deport people simply shift alleged trouble-makers to another location. What an odd way to fight an international war against international terrorism … to say the answer is simply to shuffle terrorists from one country to another via deportation.

And then the next step is to be willing to take on terrorists – especially Muslim extremists – on their own rhetorical terms and on their own ideological ground.

One of the recruiting drives of Al Quaeda and its ilk has been its calls to cleanse the world of corruption and immorality. Just the sort of corruption and immorality that results in governments, for example, turning a blind eye to drug cultivation in their territory because some are being bribed and others are ensuring a tax-rake gets taken off the drug payments.

Only – the government I am thinking of in this case is Al Quaeda’s own top favourite, the former Taliban regime in Afghanistan, with Osama Bin-Laden not just letting the drug trade take place under his nose – but benefiting from it too.

It shows a remarkable degree of ineptness that this actual record – sordid, corrupt and immoral – is so little known, giving those same extremists a free hit in claiming to be different, better and purer.

With terrorists and extremists attracting support for opposition to corruption, our own activities to tackle it need not just to publicise this hypocrisy, but also to fight corruption itself. Too often the UK drags its feet on international anti-corruption standards.

In conclusion – we must fight terrorism not by reducing our civil liberties but by reducing its sources of support.

So to the populist, tabloid-headline seeker, I simply say: talking about being tough whilst neglecting the causes of terrorism isn’t fighting terrorism, it’s making life easy for terrorists. And for the rest of us, let us remember John F Kennedy’s words – “Peace and freedom walk together.”

Haringey residents face long waits for treatment

This week’s Journal runs the story:

Cancer drugs wait: Haringey in UK’s bottom four

CANCER sufferers in Haringey face one of the longest fights in the country for drugs to treat their illness.

Patients have to wait up to three months for a decision on appeals for certain types of medication, putting the Haringey Teaching Primary Care Trust (PCT) in the bottom four of England’s 152 trusts.

It relates to waiting times for appeals for drugs that are either judged too expensive or have not been assessed by the National Institute for Clinical Excellence.

The survey by charity Macmillan Cancer Support has led to renewed demands for action by Hornsey and Wood Green MP Lynne Featherstone.

She said: “Three months is not acceptable about decisions that mean the difference between life and death.”

Lynne Featherstone announces winner of Christmas Card Competition 2008

Six year-old Louisa Owen, from St. Aidan’s primary school, was this week announced as the proud winner of Lynne Featherstone MP’s Christmas Card Competition. On Monday, Lynne presented the Stroud Green student with book vouchers and a certificate for her fun and imaginative interpretation of this year’s theme, ‘I’m dreaming of a green Christmas’.

This year Lynne received hundreds of entries from schools all over the constituency. In addition to Louisa, four runners-up were selected whose designs will appear on the back of Lynne’s Christmas card. These are: Raheam Watts, Nightingale Primary; Pasha Patel, Alexandra Primary; Lila-Rose Marcuson, Highgate Primary and Regina Gul, Nightingale Primary.

Lynne Featherstone comments:

“I’m really impressed by the way Louisa has interpreted this year’s theme, she has really captured the theme of recycling at Christmas with her vibrant and colourful recycling sleigh.

“Each year I’m struck by the outstanding designs of the local students – they certainly are a talented bunch and I’m very proud of them all.

“I’m really starting to get that Christmas feeling now. I just want to say a huge thank you to everyone who joined in this year. It’s been so much fun.”

Fire Brigade rushes to help

Three cheers for Hornsey firefighters! I had to call the fire brigade last night. Sitting in my lounge at about 10pm a terrible noise started. Difficult to describe – a bit like a pneumatic drill / burglar alarm – but worse. I went to open the front door to see where the noise was coming from and as the noise got louder – thought to myself it was in the street somewhere.

Went back to the lounge and my younger daughter came down and I asked her if she could hear it. She could – and she went to front door and opened it and agreed it was louder outside. But then she went to the corner of the house and said it was the radiator in that corner.

I went over – and it was making a terrible noise – but there was even more noise from below in the basement where the boilers are. The house seemed at that point to be vibrating – so we screamed for my elder daughter to come, grabbed the dog and got out the house – as it felt as if something was about to blow.

I called 999 and the Fire Brigade, moved the car out the drive, put one daughter and dog in the car and the other daughter ran back in to turn off heating and hot water – which did stop the noise. We waited. Within a couple of minutes the firefighters arrived – checked everything – said it was a hammer airlock (probably) and that we had done the right thing. As another firefighter came up the path – he said – hello, I lobbied you in Parliament last week. And so he had! Small world.

Anyway – just want to say a public thank you – as it was a very frightening situation and they were there when we needed them. Literally – my heroes!

[Update: Conservative Brian Coleman has attacked me for calling out the firemen. More on this in my latest blog post – including the Fire Brigade confirming it was right for me to call them out.]

Equality impact assessments: are they effective?

Got the chance yesterday to ask a question in Parliament of the Government about equality impact assessments:

Lynne Featherstone: I am keen for equality impact assessments to be effective, but I fear that in some cases they have been more about going through the motions. Can the Minister tell me what work is being done to assess the value and change that result from such assessments, and what extra resource she will provide under the new legislation to ensure that there is effectiveness, not just a tick-box approach?

Vera Baird (Solicitor General, Law Officers’ Department): We have been examining, in specific terms, the impact that, for instance, going through a whole gender pay audit can have. Sometimes it is a process rather than an impact. That is why we have hesitated rather than going wholesale for impact assessments, assuming that they are the key to all mythologies and will put everything right. They do not necessarily do that. We are working on this, and we consider that the watchword for the equality Bill and for equal pay in particular is transparency. We will pin a number of proposals on to that basic bedrock as we take the Bill forward. (Source: TheyWorkForYou.com)

Haringey Council: children in temporary accommodation highest in country

Official figures uncovered by the Liberal Democrats show that Haringey Council has the highest number of children living in temporary accommodation out of all local authorities in England.

In 2007 there were 7,918 children living in short-term and often unsuitable housing, 1,500 more than the next highest council, Brent.

Local MP and opposition councillors on Haringey Council are calling for a fundamental review in the way housing is allocated to address the London Borough of Haringey’s apparent failure to adequately prioritise the needs of children living in temporary accommodation.

Lynne Featherstone, MP for Hornsey & Wood Green, says:

“Living with the uncertainty of not knowing when you might have to change school or leave your friends is terribly disruptive for child and family stability.

“Again Haringey is at the top of the worst type of league table. These terrible statistics confirm the sad stories I see week in and week out in my surgery. These families are being let down by Haringey Council’s housing system.

“We need an urgent rethink on the borough’s housing policy, not weak assurances.”

Councillor Laura Edge, Haringey Liberal Democrat Housing Spokesperson, adds:

“Children should be the heart of housing decisions, not an afterthought. There seems to be an annual closed door review of the housing allocation policy, but nothing seems to change.

“Enough is enough, we cannot continue with a housing allocation policy that so obviously fails the people it is supposed to help.”