Two arrested over body in burning car
February 28, 2011 by Rob Powell
Police have made two arrests following the discovery of a body in a burning car in Angerstein Lane, Blackheath.
Officers found the car alight in the early hours of Saturday morning. The body, found in the boot of the Mercedes C-Class, was later identified as 21 year old Gagandip Singh from Bexleyheath.
Mr Singh was the president of the British Sikh Students Federation. A 19 year old man and a 19 year old woman has been arrested on suspicion of his murder.
An incident room has opened at Lewisham under Detective Chief Inspector Damian Allain from the Homicide and Serious Crime Command.
DCI Allain said: “We are appealing for anyone who was in or around the Angerstein Lane area, and who may have seen this car either arrive or seen anyone acting suspiciously as the car was left ablaze, to contact us.
“We already know that the car was last seen around 5:30pm in south-east London, so we are also appealing to anyone who can help us identify how the car came to be in Angerstein Lane.
Any witnesses or anyone with any information should call the incident room on 020 8721 4805 or they can call Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.
Friends and family of the victim are planning to visit Angerstein Lane this evening to pay their respects.
Ms Cupcake mystified over market axe
February 28, 2011 by Rob Powell
Popular Greenwich Market trader, Ms Cupcake, has been left devastated after being told by market bosses she can no longer trade at weekends.
The baker, who promises “the naughtiest vegan cakes in town”, had hoped to carry on trading at Greenwich Market whilst also expanding the business into new premises at Brixton Market.
An email from market bosses assured her that if she did “decide to open elsewhere we would be more than happy for you to continue with your stall on the market for whichever days you wished to trade.”
Earlier this month, business owner Mellissa Morgan announced her expansion plans – only to get the shock news that Greenwich Market was axeing her from her weekend pitch.
“Ms Cupcake” says the decision will have “huge financial repercussions” for her business and that she will no longer be able to recruit five new members of staff she had planned to.
“All we have ever done is promote Greenwich and the market and loved every minute we were there. This is the biggest slap in the face I could ever imagine”, she said.
Regular customer, Daren Clarke, told Greenwich.co.uk:
“I really don’t understand why a thriving, vibrant stall such as this is having its hours cut in such a drastic and, dare I say, draconian way. Only being allowed to trade on a Friday, and having your regular customers from the usual Saturday and Sunday markets deprived of their ‘fix’, seems very short sighted on the behalf of the powers that be.”
Paul Turton, manager of Greenwich Hospital’s commercial estate, commented:
“Because of the ongoing review of the food stalls at the market, we decided to revert to the pre-November trading pattern which allows Ms Cupcake in the week and Ruby Tuesday [who also sells vegan cupcakes] at the weekend.”
Ms Cupcake will be opening the new Brixton shop in April – get more information about that and where she will be trading until then at her website.
Greenwich.co.uk understands that the shock plan to cut the number of food stalls which was announced to traders last summer may not now be proceeding as originally planned.
The proposal, which provoked an angry response from traders, to reduce the number of hot food stalls within the market and to move those remaining into a retail unit is being reviewed by Greenwich Hospital.
NOGOE are small, vocal and “very well heeled”, says MP
February 24, 2011 by Rob Powell
NOGOE campaigners have been left smarting by comments made by local MP, Nick Raynsford, about them at a recent House of Commons committee considering the Government’s Localism Bill.
MPs were debating proposals within the bill to give new powers to communities to nominate buildings or land as “Assets of Community Value” – properties the community would have the guaranteed time to put together a bid for if the owner decided to sell.
Mr Raynsford expressed his concern that the system could be abused and put forward his own amendment which included a provision to pay compensation to owners where community asset listings were made as a result of a “vexatious application”.
He described to the committee a “real life scenario” he had “lived with for the last five years”. The “large majority of local residents” in the borough of Greenwich welcomed the London 2012 equestrian events in Greenwich Park as a “very attractive proposition” he said, but there was a “relatively small but extremely vocal group of people, very well-heeled with access to legal expertise, who were strongly opposed to this.”
He told MPs that if this provision had been available, campaigners would have sought to designate the park as an Asset of Community Value. “That is the risk: people will try to abuse these provisions in order to stop developments that they regard as undesirable.”, he added.
One upset NOGOE member, wishing to remain anonymous, has since written to the MP:
“I need to point out that NOGOE comprises a great social mix of concerned people of widely differing ages,income and professional status which includes lawyers and some well-connected high-profile professionals but the membership is far wider and inclusive than you seem to believe and I think you should apologise for casting incorrect aspersions on these well-intended people in your constituency”
Stockwell Street exhibition opens
February 23, 2011 by Rob Powell
The University of Greenwich’s vision for a large development in Stockwell Street goes on show today.
The public exhibition of their plans for a new library and School of Architecture at the site, which was formely home to the Village Market, runs from today until Saturday at their Greenwich Campus.
Full details of where to go and of the opening hours can be seen on a dedicated website about the project.
Paul Webbewood: Cuts – mind your own business!
February 22, 2011 by Paul Webbewood
Although I am a supporter of the Coalition Government, I worry about its approach to local authorities. While Nick Clegg fiddles around with alternative voting and House of Lords reform, Eric Pickles seems free to burn and slash his way through England’s town halls.
However after being given a chance to occupy the moral high ground Greenwich Council is determined to vacate it. The Council seems reluctant to take local people into its confidence over proposed cuts in services or to offer any comprehensive strategy. Its initial approach is to nibble at things which, although not life and death, add to the quality of life in the Borough – Blackheath Fireworks, Maryon Wilson Zoo and now Blackheath Halls – and at least in the case of the fireworks the timing of the announcement to stop funding was at best incompetent and at worst malicious. And we still haven’t officially heard whether Greenwich will implement the one cut that almost everybody wants – the £30k spent on the invitation-only Mayoral inauguration.
Another example of the Greenwich Way occurred on 21st February when the Council’s Overview and Scrutiny Committee (O&S) commenced a marathon task of hearing representations from voluntary bodies whose grant may be removed or reduced. Effectively O&S has been asked to quality review the process adopted by the Council’s executive.
Now all credit to the O&S councillors for putting in the hours and there seems to be some merit in the idea. However this was negated by a unanimous vote by Labour and Conservative members to sit in secret, using a procedural device usually adopted when a committee is considering commercial tenders. Although there is an element of competition for the available funds, it seems far-fetched to claim that commercial confidentiality is involved when the Council decides how it allocates grants to voluntary organisations. In the past similar representations have been heard in public. However this time O&S chairman Councillor Mick Hayes (Labour) – normally a genial and popular figure – seemed rather put out when he was told that the Committee could vote on going into secret session, rather than meekly obey a recommendation to do so.
This seems part of a pattern of obfuscation. On February 14th the BBC 10 o’clock News ran an item on the cuts with Greenwich as a case study. There were contributions from voluntary sector supremo Naomi Goldberg, Mark Sesnan of Greenwich Leisure Ltd, a possible Big Society prototype, Union man Onay Kasab, plus Nick Raynsford MP. No contribution from the Council who had declined to speak to the Beeb. Don’t ask me why they passed up on the opportunity to address an audience even larger than the local blogosphere or that reached by Greenwich Time’s distribution network.
The Government’s answer to grumbles from Councils about funding is to say:
1) Pay Chief Executives less
2) Save money by working with neighbouring Councils.
In Lewisham Mayor Bullock has launched an all-party constitutional review which we are told will look at top salaries and whether the Borough needs its current number of councillors. Greenwich’s sole constitutional reform so far is a mean-minded measure to make it harder for planning objectors to access councillors.
Greenwich Leader Chris Roberts has said that he isn’t that keen on joint arrangements across Borough boundaries and prefers closer links with other public sector organisations in Greenwich, although I am not aware of any practical suggestions on what this might mean. Anyway Lewisham, our most obvious potential partner, perhaps scarred by the Blackheath fireworks debacle, inclines towards an alliance with Southwark and Lambeth.
Not for the first time I am tempted to conclude that, if London is Europe, then Greenwich is Belarus.
Daily Photo: 21/02/2011 – Greenwich Park in 2012
February 21, 2011 by Rob Powell

A batch of images was revealed last week which illustrate how key venues will look during the London 2012 Olympics. This artist’s impression was carried out by Populous on behalf of the London 2012 organisers. Copyright belongs to Populous.
Doctors elected to Greenwich GP Consortium Shadow Board
February 21, 2011 by Rob Powell
Seven local GPs have been elected by their peers to serve on the new Greenwich GP Consortium Shadow Board.
Under NHS reform plans put forward by the government, local GPs will gain control of NHS budgets and be able to commission healthcare services directly for their patients.
Doctors will form groups to manage this process and the line up of the Greenwich GP Consortium Shadow Board has been settled after 109 local doctors participated in an election.
The elected members are: Ram Aggarwal, Hany Wahba, Robert Hughes, Rebecca Rosen, Niraj Patel, Eugenia Lee and Nayan Patel.
The election count was managed by Greenwich Council’s Returning Officer and the single transferable vote system was used. Electoral Reform Services administered the count.
If the changes are introduced as planned, the consortium will take responsibility for commissioning services by April 2013 at which point the existing Primary Care Trust will have been phased out.
More information available here: http://www.greenwich.nhs.uk/gp_consortia
London 2012 schedule unveiled
February 17, 2011 by Rob Powell
London 2012 organisers have revealed the schedule for next year’s summer Olympics.
Full details of the whole schedule are on the London 2012 website, but here’s details of the events in Greenwich.
8th – 12th August – Basketball at the “North Greenwich Arena”, as the O2 will be known for the duration of the Olympics.
28th – 31st July – Equestrian Eventing at Greenwich Park.
2nd, 3rd, 7th, 9th August – Equestrian Dressage at Greenwich Park.
4th, 5th, 6th, 8th August – Equestrian Jumping at Greenwich Park.
28th July – 2nd August & 5th, 6th, 7th August – Artistic Gymnastics at the North Greenwich Arena.
3rd – 4th August – Trampoline Gymnastics at North Greenwich Arena
11th – 12th August – Modern Pentathlon events at Greenwich Park
28th July – 6th August – Shooting at Woolwich Barracks
Cable car scheme hangs in the balance
February 16, 2011 by Rob Powell
The fate of the Thames Cable Car from North Greenwich to the Royal Docks has been left hanging in the air after a new safety review was ordered.
Friends of the Earth campaigners have forced the move by claiming that the cable car would cross the Public Safety Zone for City Airport flights.
The TFL scheme had already received the backing of Greenwich and Newham councils, but in response to safety concerns, London Mayor Boris Johnson has ordered a national air traffic services safety assessment, due to complete by March.
More information can be found in Adam Bienkov’s report for Snipe, and Darryl at 853 has more on the campaigners who have highlighted the issue.
Daily Photo: 16/02/2011 – John Humphries House
February 16, 2011 by Rob Powell

When I had an office in the annexe of John Humphries House in Stockwell Street, I never considered it to be a pleasant building, but the 60s office block which housed a local authority computer centre actually manages to look quite attractive in this lovely photo taken by Robert Carr.
An application for the demolition of the building has been submitted as part of the University of Greenwich’s redevelopment plans for the site. Find out more about their plans and the dates of their public exhibition on their dedicated webpage.






