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Angry Charedim hold a tow truck hostage

May 16, 2008 10:57

By

Leon Symons,

Leon Symons

2 min read

Two tiny parking bays have sparked a major row between the Charedi community and Transport for London. The row threatened to boil over last week when dozens of angry motorists surrounded a tow-truck that was about to remove a car — and held it for two hours before allowing it to go. The parking bays are at the junction of Stamford Hill and Clapton Common, in North East London, outside a row of shops.

One is a regular parking bay while the other is for loading and unloading. A sign for the loading bay tells drivers they have 20 minutes to load or unload. But it does not tell them about what a TfL spokesperson called the “three-minute rule”. This means that, if a tow truck sees a car in the bay and no-one near it for just three minutes, they will remove it.

https://api.thejc.atexcloud.io/image-service/alias/contentid/173ps3lpndmdt4049kb/parking_Shuki%2520Moses.portrait.jpg%3Ff%3Ddefault%26%24p%24f%3Dc678983?f=3x2&w=732&q=0.6
Shuki Moses with the sign many think relates to the parking bay

Local people have also accused TfL of deliberately targeting the area and issuing tickets randomly, even sticking them on transport company Darkei Noam’s vehicles parked in a privately-owned road off Clapton Common. Manager Ephraim Goldstein, said: “We have had more than 120 tickets in the past few months. You cannot imagine the hassle the wardens give us. We have written to TfL dozens of times, telling them it’s a private road and that we have the owner’s permission to park there, but they take no notice. They still give out tickets and tow away cars.

“People come here to do their shopping, particularly before Shabbat, and can emerge from a shop to find they have no car. Something has to be done because we feel we are being singled out for this treatment.” Mr Goldstein has sought the advice of Barrie Segal, who runs a website to help people fight parking tickets.

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