
The squat was one of the largest seen in London in recent years. About 100 people – a motley crew of homeless people, dreadlocked Spanish ravers, English punks, Eastern Europeans with low-paying jobs and their trusty dogs – moved in after it had been vacated by security guards in early October. Around 30 of those residents filed into the hearing last month, ready to argue why they should be allowed to stay in the building.The council’s lawyers laid out their position first: they wanted to turn the site into social housing, but the Secretary of State for Education had insisted that it be turned into a "free school". That was pretty much it from them; they didn’t have to indulge in any courtroom theatrics, because there's no point in melodrama when you have the law on your side and the Department for Education breathing down your neck to re-open a school.Then came the turn of "persons unknown" – the squatters. "The only agenda we have is shelter," began their spokesperson. He then appealed to "a humanitarian perspective; that the council has the power to help with the social responsibility to house people, and we rely on their positive decisions to provide shelter for the dispossessed members of society".

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