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Bailiffs arrive at traveller site
19 September 2011 Last updated at 10:06 ET
Fergal Keane: “Two ng activists have concreted themselves in”
Bailiffs have arrived at the UK’s largest illegal traveller at Dale Farm in Essex and urged campaigners to stop obstructing the eviction process.
About a dozen men in blue jackets marked “Enforcement Officer” then moved away from the .
A spokesman for the bailiffs said he was concerned a structure erected by the campaigners had the potential to “put people’s lives at danger”.
As many as 400 people have been living on the 51 unauthorised caravan plots.
Officials said 12 families had already left the at Crays Hill and those remaining have built reinforcements at the six-acre .
Basildon Council had hoped to persuade all residents to leave but accused some of stalling to delay the action until a planning hearing in late November.
Those remaining, including activists, erected a barrier but it was taken down by council staff.
‘Overwhelming support’
At an earlier news conference council officials said they believed talks with residents had been aimed at delaying the evictions until 22 November when the planning inspectorate is expected to rule on an application for pitches on land nearby.
Council leader Tony Ball said: “If they do not allow us in then we will begin action. Once it starts it will move swiftly and the will be cleared even though it might take six to eight weeks.”
Electricity would be turned off for the safety of the operatives who would go in to the but Mr Ball would not give an exact time when the evictions will begin.
Councillor Tony Ball: “I would much rather we reached a peaceful solution”
“My personal concern is over the introduction of outsiders who may have their own agenda and not have the interests of the travellers at heart,” he said.
“I have also been told that these protesters on the now outnumber the travellers.”
He added: “The overwhelming number of callers to the council support our action and approach.”
The cleared would also be left so that it could not be re-entered, he said.
Essex Police said their presence at Dale Farm was intended to keep the peace and ensure anyone breaking the law was dealt with but no arrests had been made so far.
Supporters inside the said they wanted Basildon Council to provide 62 plots to temporarily house those made homeless while planning permission was sought for other s.
The council said it had so far received 56 homelessness applications.
The Liberal Democrat chairman of the All Party Parliamentary group for Gypsy Roma travellers, Andrew George, said he had hoped the dispute could be resolved through negotiation.
But he said he was also aware the traveller issue was a national one as there were not enough legal s for them to go to.
‘Elderly and sick’
Travellers inside Dale Farm have reacted angrily to claims that only activists remain inside the perimeter.
Resident Kathleen McCarthy said: “The elderly and sick are here and we will stay. That bluff won’t work with us.”
Jan Jarab, the European representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, said he had made an offer to the British government to help with negotiations, citing his experience in similar situations where in Europe.
Mr Jarab was “informally told that wouldn’t happen”, he said.
“Obviously the forced eviction of hundreds of people including women and children is something to be avoided if there are alternatives,” he said.
BBC correspondent Fergal Keane, who is inside the illegal part of the , said: “There is now about an equal split between travellers and supporters. The travellers are certainly grateful for the support of the activists.
“They are expecting the bailiffs at any time and they are unlikely to come through the front entrance.
“Wherever they enter the they are likely to be met by peaceful resistance.”
It is thought that many of the residents have moved to the legal area which is not subject to the eviction order.
Dale Farm is a former scrapyard that was bought by several traveller families who moved on to the a decade ago.
Within a year other families had bought patches of land and moved their caravans there but it has been the council’s case that this part of the is greenbelt land.
These moves were brought to the attention of local council planners who applied for the people to be moved which sparked a long legal battle at the same time as more travellers arrived to make their homes on the .
Travellers upgraded their homes by replacing caravans with chalets and other semi-permanent structures.
The legal battle ended when Basildon Council was given authority to begin evictions earlier this year.
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Do live at the Dale Farm travellers’ ? Are protesting on the residents’ behalf? Are against the ’s occupation? Are a bailiff evicting people from the land? Send us r comments and experiences.