Known as ‘Little India’, Southall is home to a huge South Asian population, one of the biggest concentrations outside India.
The town has dozens of Indian restaurants and a huge Asian shopping centre.
It was used as the location for hit 2002 British film Bend It Like Beckham, starring Keira Knightley and Parminda Nagra.
It also boasts a royal connection – Kate Middleton’s mother Carole was born there, moving away when she was 11.
However, its history contains darker patches.
In 1981 it was the scene of devastating race riots, which saw a pub burnt down and hundreds of Asians and right-wing skinheads fighting in the streets.
Sixty police officers and 120 rioters were injured during the violence.
In 1997, meanwhile, tragedy struck when a high-speed train smashed into a stationary freight train near the town, leaving seven dead and 139 injured.
Sukhvinder Singh, who is originally from the Punjab in northern India, shares a shed with three others for £500 a month in Southall Green.
The Indian labourer, who arrived in Britainon a student visa, told The Sun: ‘I’m here to work. If I wanted to study I could have stayed in India.’ Sukhvinder told how if the council raided the shed where he pays rent then there are ‘a thousand other places like this we can stay in’. He also told how he thinks rogue landlords flout planning rules. ‘You just have to say you’re building a shed for tools. Once you’ve got the doors on, you can do what you like.’
Another immigrant explained how he had been there for nine years and had never had a visit from the council.
It is believed there are 10,000 similar shacks in Londonand the Home Counties.
Many people who live in them are cash-in-hand manual workers who pay no tax.
A man claiming to be the landlord told the newspaper how he was currently building a shed at the bottom of his garden. He had built another five years earlier and charges £40 per person per week.
‘It’s up to you how many tenants you put in,’ he said. ‘I’ve had no problems from the council – not yet. You just say you are bulding a garage.’
Planning permission is always needed if a homeowner builds or converts an outbuilding for people to live in.
The Housing Act states that council officers must give 24 hours’ notice before visiting properties.
This means evidence of people living in the garages and sheds can easily be removed, which has led to criticism of the system by some Ealing councillors.
An Ealing Council spokesman told The Sun: ‘This is a growing problem across London. We wrote to the Government in July to highlight flaws in the law that mean we have to give written notice before we can enter a property, making it hard to prove buildings are being used as accommodation.’
A spokesman for the Department for Communities and Local Government said local authorities already had a wide range of enforcement powers to clamp down on beds with sheds.
The spokesman added: ‘Ministers are however in discussion with local authorities on this issue.’
Filed under: Uncategorized Tagged: | Poverty in London, Sikhs in London, Southall
