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Saviours or Sinners? Save the EMD Cinema, Walthamstow 21 April, 2009

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It’s what you do that shows what you want.

Renato Cardoso, from the UCKG Website

I was saddened to see a report in the LondonPaper last week announcing the proposals for converting yet another cinema into a church. When I used to live in Plumstead, South East London, I regularly passed through  Woolwich, and at the end of the High Street was the New Wine Church, another converted cinema.

emd london paper

Clearly empty cinemas are ripe for redevelopment, a ready-made auditorium and central town location make them ideal properties for conversion, and as more small cinemas close, in the face of increasing competition from the multiplexes, being stretched for product by the studios, and even being pressurised by the sale of counterfeit DVDs, there is and increasing number available.

But what has happened to the EMD in Waltham Forest is a sorry tale indeed. The full story can be found on the McGuffin website, an organisation founded to save the cinema, but to summarise, after being grade 2 listed by English Heritage in 2001, the EMD, a working cinema, was sold in 2003 by its owners for twice the market value to the United Church of the Kingdom of God (UCKG) a rather dubious Brazilian organisation that already has over 20 properties in the London area, including one in Kilburn, and Catford.

Once they had purchased the EMD, the church immediately closed it to the public and applied for a change in use. Against fierce opposition from the town, and the council, the permission was denied, an appeal lost, and the church ordered to sell the property. Although it was put up for sale and bids received, the church rejected these and the cinema has since fallen into disrepair. The McGuffin Society has campaigned vigorously for the council to submit a compulsory purchase order against the church, which has refused to do so, and now the situation is that the church has made another revised application for use including ‘community use’, which the council is moving towards supporting.

According to previous reports, the church made similar concessions to gain approval for a development in Catford, but once this had been approved, the church became uncooperative and the former cinema is now solely a church building.

The McGuffin Society organised a protest on 18 April, which sadly I could not attend, which was attended by over 400 people, so clearly the feeling is strong that this should not go ahead. Even though I am not a resident of Waltham Forest, I agree that this development should be halted and the use returned to a cinema for the community.

The quotation from the church website actually reflects how I feel about the proposals for this cinema, or any cinema that is threatened with closure and redevelopment. I don’t want the church to have this cinema, and I’ll do what I can to support the campaign, and I urge everyone to do so.

Other articles about the EMD:

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/hitchcocks-old-gem-1671058.html

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/8006735.stm

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/5184501/Tony-Robinson-campaigns-to-save-cinema-where-Alfred-Hitchcock-saw-first-films.html

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23677247-details/Stars+join+protest+to+save+cinema/article.do

http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/news/wfnews/4303512.WALTHAMSTOW__Hundreds_campaign_to_save_EMD/

http://archipelago-of-truth.blog.co.uk/2009/02/11/the-emd-cinema-and-the-subtle-art-of-sitting-on-the-fence-while-looking-decisive-5553901/

http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/search/4245135.WALTHAMSTOW__Public_opinion_voiced_on_EMD/

No more pleasures in life… 20 February, 2009

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There was a nice little puff-piece on the news about a Portuguese bakery opening up in Los Angeles. Visited by the likes of Nicole Kidman, Kevin Bacon and Ben Stiller, the reporter broke the news that pastels nata were taking Hollywood by storm.

But then our cousin pointed out that each pastel nata, which is a little custard tart in a puff pastry filling, contains 800 calories! Nearly as much as a Big Mac! At my present rate it would take me four hours in the gym to burn off one nata!

Back Home for a Few Days… 17 February, 2009

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Taking the opportunity to sort out a few things in Portugal. There has been a lot of news over the last few months about the Crise in Portugal: How things have been getting worse, the recession beginning to bite, and of course increasing unemployment. It’ll be interesting to see how the Portuguese are reporting news of the protests in the UK against foreign workers (“British jobs for British workers”) and the effect of closures such as Mini production at Cowley, which has affected some Portuguese migrants.

It’s deja vu, all over again 26 November, 2008

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Increasing unemployment, poor economic forecasts, country in the doldrums, falling house prices, government under pressure. Strange, but it all seems so familiar.

Let’s tell you what happened in Portugal. It was a bouyant country, not the richest in Europe, but business was good and the sun was always shining. But then, around the middle of 2007, things started to go a little pear-shaped. People who once had money found their spending wasn’t going so far as costs began to increase, especially for utilities and fuel. Many salaries remained low, little above the minimum wage of 426€, and spending became stretched.

Cheap food and drink was available from the supermarkets so businesses like bars and restaurants started to feel the pinch as people stopped going out so much. Other shops, such as clothes and luxuries also started to suffer, although mobile phone providers and utilities companies bucked the trend, as they always do.

Then businesses started to close, house prices began to fall and unemployment rose. Soon, almost on a daily basis, news programmes reported factories closing and people being made redundant. Of the jobs that were available, most were low paid, and people started looking elsewhere for jobs. Previously, workers from eastern Europe came to Portugal for jobs, now Portuguese workers were going to Spain, France, Germany or the UK to find work and send money home.

For those in Portugal things were getting tougher. The country started to slide into recession around the beginning of 2008, not helped by a smoking ban which badly affected many businesses, not least our own. The government continued to spin the story that everything was fine, and they were doing a great job, but people were complaining and the opposition parties were saying things were getting worse.

So the government decided something needed to be done. Although Portugal had received millions, if not billions of euros from the EU, they invested heavily in the public infrastructure, like building projects, roads and schools. Promises were made to give every school child a computer, and in a bid to stimulate the economy they reduced VAT (IVA) by 1% to 20%.

Did it work? Was a 1% cut in VAT and increased public spending enough to get people spending? Not really. One of the consequences of the VAT cut was that some companies actually increased prices to compensate, so the overall value remained the same, or even went higher.

As people found life more difficult there was an increase in crime; carjackings increased by 55% over the first few months, and there was a dramatic increase in bank robberies. ‘Soft’ crimes like fraud increased as vunerable people were preyed upon, with some con artists posing as social security officials and stealing hundreds of euros off pensioners. Even the recently unemployed suffered as some companies that went bust were found to have not been paying the national insurance payments for their employees, meaning they were not eligible for any benefits.

Already in the UK there have been reports that businesses will not pass on the VAT cut, with one letter writer in the free London Paper saying their shop has just increased prices by 2.5% before next week’s drop. There was also an article in the Guardian a few weeks ago saying there would be an increase in crime in the UK following a recession, and the BBC was reporting a 25% increase in shoplifting this morning.

As house prices fell in Portugal, buyers also fell as the banks refused access to mortgages, and this was before the global banking crash, while estate agents continued to try to keep house prices unsustainably high. New house building dried up, as in the UK, and many housing projects were abandoned.

Unemployment is continuing to increase, as is crime – as we were leaving Portugal had their first ever armoured car robbery, although some blamed that on ETA, and yesterday two armed men robbed a cafe and the salesman of the proceeds from a games machine.

For businesses times continue to be tough, although one bank, BPN, has tried to insulate itself from losses by salting away 130€ million in an off-shore account in Brazil.

So it’s a odd watching the news and reading the papers as we’ve been through all of this before. It’s déjà vu all over again.

Back in the, back in the… UK 1 November, 2008

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One of the rules of blogging that I read once was, and I paraphrase, “never say that you’ve been away for a while.”

I’m going to have to break that rule because I have been away, and the changes have been pretty major.

For a start we’re no longer in Portugal, an opportunity arose in the UK that had to be taken, so this blog is more about life in the UK now. But we’ll still try to cover what is happening in both the UK and back home (nice that I consider Portugal ‘home’ even though it didn’t do us any favours).

One of the major stories of course is the Crise, or the Credit Crunch as it became known in the UK. Clearly now it appears that the economic downturn has been a long-term thing, and the poorer European countries were suffering effects long before the richer ones.

We can also take a look at crime (swap robberies for knife crime), technology, jobs and opportunities, politics (of course), football, photography and the weather. So there’s still plenty to talk about.

Don’t worry, it won’t all be doom and gloom, there’s plenty to smile about, even in the depths of a global recession.

If you are working today… 15 August, 2008

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Normal service will be resumed on Monday 15 August, 2008

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crash wreckage

There’ll be no bank robberies today – but only because the banks are closed for a holiday. Instead today is a feriado, a Bank holiday, in this case for the Catholic holiday of Assumption, when the Virgin Mary was transported into Heaven with her body and soul united. However, for many Portuguese it’ll just be another long weekend and they’ll be turning to their other great passion: killing each other on the roads.

Portuguese driving is notoriously bad, so much so that even French drivers have a good reputation. Since the holiday season started in the middle of July there have been over 2.000 accidents, 60 deaths and over 300 serious injuries. In the weekend of 1st August there were 16 deaths, and last weekend alone 20 people were killed in a 24h period.

For a London driver, rarely able to get above 30mph most of the time, this need for speed is baffling. Portuguese drivers, mainly in black or silver Seat’s or in expensive Audi’s or Mercede’s, will rocket past our little Modus, sometimes forcing cars coming in the other direction to move to the side of the road. Often speeding drivers will be in commercial vehicles, easy to spot as all company vehicles are two seater’s with a metal grill behind the front seats, or in company vans. Because the drivers don’t own these cars, they’ll drive like Tiago Monteiro around the Portuguese roads. In the Aveiro/Oiã area there are vehicles from two companies that we are always wary of: Würth (who co-incidentally sponsor Formula 1) and Centroauto. When we see these on the road we always get ready to move out of the way.

The GNR do what they can, of course. There is a road safety campaign operating at the moment, to get people to drive slower, and the TV news reports the statistics each day as they show images of crushed and mangled cars. The worst thing is to see images of the bombeiros hosing down big pools of blood on the road, but it hardly seems to have any effect.

Mind you, bad driving is not limited to the daytime. Since today is a holiday, last night the bars will have been full of people drinking and getting in the mood for their long weekend. After necking umpteen beers, or whiskies, they’ll think nothing of getting in their car and driving home – or to a club. At night the police set up checkpoints and give people random breath tests. Over the holiday season they adopt a zero tolerance policy to drink-driving, in an attempt to demonstrate it’s a stupid thing to do, but driving while intoxicated seems a difficult habit to break in Portugal.

So if you’re going away this weekend, take care on the roads, enjoy the beach, and bom fim-de-semana.

Another day, another hold up 14 August, 2008

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A whole day can’t go by without mentioning a bank robbery in Portugal. After last weeks hostage situation, and yesterday’s attempted robbery of a Millennium in Loures comes news of yet another bank hold-up in Lisbon.

This time, a branch of the Banco Popular was the target, when a 50 year-old man wearing a wig held up the staff with a gun. The man fled the bank on foot, and the police have yet to reveal how much was stolen.

This robbery comes on the same day that the Diário Económico reported that in the first SIX MONTHS of 2008 there has been a bank robbery, or an attempted robbery, once every 40 hours in Portugal, with a haul of approximately 439.000€.

Topping the list of banks targetted was Millennium bcp, with 15 robberies, followed by the Caixa Geral de Depósitos (CGD) with 13 and Montepio with 12. Santander, which was fourth on the list, with 8 robberies, actually lost the most money, with a total of 86.000€, while CGD lost 66.000€ the banks Funchal and BANIF lost 48.000€. Aside from the hostage situation last week, BES actually had the least number of branches robbed.

No espaço de um ano, a Policia Judiciária revelou em duas ocasiões fotografias do ‘solitário português’ retiradas dos sistemas de videovigilânica interna dos bancos assaltados. Em Março último surgiu a pista que permitiu a sua detençãoWith aprroximately four robberies per week, the survey identified, unsurprisingly, that Lisbon was the city most at risk, followed by Porto in the north and Sétubal in the south. On average, the haul from each robbery was 4.400€.

One thief that won’t be contributing to the figures for the rest of the year was the robber known as ‘El solitário’, who was caught by police last week after robbing 26 banks.

The daily free sheet Destak compared the figures in Portugal with those in Brazil and the US. With a population of about 10million, if the numbers of robberies continue at their present rate, there will be 100 robberies by the end of the year. By contrast, with a population of 180million there were 529 robberies in 2007, and in the US over 10,000 robberies. On the other hand, Portugal can’t compare with Baghdad, officially the bank robbery capital of the world, where approximately $1million a month is stolen.

While the police are chasing bank robbers, the funeral of Paulo Salazar, the 13 year-old killed in the foiled warehouse robbery on Monday, will take place tomorrow. Although family will be there, and no doubt a completment of GNR keeping an eye on the service, one person who won’t be is the father of the boy, who hasn’t been seen since being driven away from court yesterday. Odds are he won’t turn up for his court date, either.

Justice, the Portuguese way 14 August, 2008

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Sandro (na foto) e o irmão foram postos em liberdade pelo Tribunal de LouresRemember the story about the thieves who broke into a warehouse and when they were confronted by the police a 13 year-old boy was killed? Well this one is just going to run and run… literally.

OK, let’s summarise: We have two criminals, caught red-handed on Monday evening in the act of stealing from a warehouse by the police, In the altercation that follows, a 13 year-old boy, the son of one of the men that they took along with them, is killed. They went to court in Loures yesterday (which coincidentally, recently lost its ATM from the courthouse lobby in a robbery) and are freed on bail. All they have to do is report on a weekly basis to the police until their trial.

Now it turns out that the father of the boy, Paulo Salazar, presented a false ID and address to the police when they were caught, and that in February 2007 he had previously escaped from prison, which the judge wasn’t aware of when they were released. As they were driven away from the courthouse by a relative, in a very expensive looking Mercedes, Portuguese TV were reporting that the father was a fugitive. That was the last anyone has seen of him, and the police are now on the hunt. The father, Sandro Salazar, was in prison for his part in an armed robbery in the Algarve.

In the meantime, the family of the boy who was killed has accused the police of racism – they were ciganos (gypsies) and of having a ‘shoot to kill’ policy. The fact that they were ciganos has left the family with little sympathy in Portugal. While there is sadness that a 13 year-old was killed, many people have condemned the family for taking the boy along on a criminal act in the first place. One cruel comment in the daily newspaper Correio da Manhã was that it was one less cigano that will commit crimes in the future.

In the meantime, while the Portuguese news were reporting the latest developments in this case, there was another bank robbery in Loures. A Millennium BCP bank was the target this time. The robbers burst into the bank and robbed the staff and customers of their possessions. Of the four robbers, three were caught, with a total of around 3.000€ on them. One unlucky customer was in the process of depositing a cheque for 2.000€, which is presently being held by the police. The fourth robber escaped in a Honda Civic, and is presently being hunted.

This sudden surge in robberies seems to be a part of the increasing effects of the crisis presently affecting the country. Earlier in the year, a business owner attempted to rob a bank to pay his debts, the number of carjackings increased 55% in the first six months of 2008, and robberies of ATM’s were reported once every other day (this is robberies OF cash machines, not FROM cash machines.)

Congratulations, Bill and Rebecca 13 August, 2008

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IMG_8833

Originally uploaded by jwinokur

It’s not often that the news brings a little joy, but congratulations to Rebecca D’Madeiros and Bill Duda, who were married on 21 June with a Star Wars themed wedding.

The bride and groom were dressed as Mon Mothma (she was the head of the Rebel Alliance), and Admiral Ackbar (in charge of the Rebel fleet in The Empire Strikes Back). Yoda presided over the ceremony, and the ring-bearer was Princess Leia, in her gold bikini from Return of the Jedi.

To see more of this great day, click on the image. Contgratulations Bill and Rebecca.