Pubdate: Fri, 21 Jun 2002 Source: Independent (UK) Contact: 2002 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd. Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/209 Author: Steve Boggan COUNCIL LEADER CALLS FOR ZERO TOLERANCE AS THE WEST END SLIDES INTO LAWLESSNESS AND DECAY Only five years ago, it was the geographical hub of what Newsweek called the coolest city in the world. From here, the vibe that fuelled Cool Britannia emanated in a feel-good wave that helped propel New Labour to an optimistic victory. Today, London's West End, the home of Britain's club and theatre culture is, says the man who "manages" it, close to anarchy. Gone is the feel-good factor, replaced instead by drug-dealing on the streets, armed robbers, binge drinkers and so much rubbish that it cannot be cleared away between the end of one debauched day and the dawn of another. Simon Milton, the leader of Westminster City Council, compares the West End today to Times Square in New York 10 years ago, a magnet for drug-users and dealers, criminals and vagrants. And the astonishing thing about Mr Milton's claim is that although his council licensed the pubs, clubs and bars responsible for the entertainment saturation suffocating the area, he is shouting about it from the rooftops. "We are struggling to put our best foot forward and I realise that this is shooting ourselves in that foot," he said. "But we can't brush the problem under the carpet. We have aggressive drug-dealers on the streets, vagrants and beggars. There have been shootings in clubs , outside the Hanover Grand and on Golden Square. We can't ignore this. We have to adopt a policy of zero tolerance." The West End is a generic term for a heartland encompassing what planners after the Second World War called a central activity zone, an area in which Londoners could work, shop, dine, dance and enjoy culture. Among the thronging areas it encompasses are Leicester Square, Covent Garden, Trafalgar Square, Oxford Street, Soho, Mayfair, Fitzrovia, Piccadilly, Charing Cross and Marylebone. Some parts, such as Mayfair and Marylebone, have few problems at street level. Others, including Soho and Leicester Square, are becoming characterised by it. Every night, tens of thousands of people flock to a relatively small area up to 100,000 a night at weekends and they can drink in many bars until 3am. But the Underground closes at 12.30am, night buses are regarded as dangerous and unpopular and many licensed cab drivers avoid the area, leaving it for 5,000 unlicensed drivers to pick people off the street illegally. Many of these drivers, when caught, are found to be carrying drugs or to have criminal records for violence. At a meeting of the Greater London Authority this week at which plans to relax licensing laws were being discussed, Mr Milton pulled no punches. "We have experienced a proliferation of bars and clubs, the rise of the 'mega pub' with its emphasis on cheap 'vertical drinking' and the emergence of the 'mega club' holding up to 2,500 people," he said. During the same period, he added, the granting of 3am alcohol licences had become the norm. "Extended hours and saturation of alcohol-related premises creates major policing headaches," he said. "We have only 15 police officers on patrol to cope with hundreds of thousands of drunk young people on a Friday or Saturday. There is open drug-dealing on the streets as dealers find the crowds to be sources of business as well as offering them anonymity. Guns and violence are common in the West End." On a hot, sunny evening this week, the best and worst of the West End was on display. In Covent Garden and Soho, good-natured drinkers spilt on to the streets after work. Tourists milled about, clearly astonished by the buzz that even a midweek night in the capital can generate. But as dusk fell, the mood changed. Outside the Prince Edward Theatre on Old Compton Street, Charles Dwyer, an American from Boston, was queueing for the musical Mamma Mia! "There's a guy in the doorway next door drinking beer, smoking cigarettes and begging," he said. "Where'd he get the money for the smokes? He wasn't just begging. It was a bit more than that, a bit aggressive. And we've already been offered drugs twice. It's a very uncomfortable feeling. Is this area OK?" Along Moor Street, only yards away, several African men are offering drugs. They don't mess about with cannabis here. They sell heroin and cocaine. Along other thoroughfares, Berwick Street, Meard Street, Romilly Street, Rupert Street and Tisbury Court, residents say crack is on sale. "You see them smoking it from old Coke cans," said a senior member of the Soho Society, which looks after residents' interests. He has asked not to be named because drug-dealers frequent the street on which he lives. "In the morning, you go down and you clear away the cans and the needles left there by heroin users. Mothers are frightened to take their children to school because these guys have guns and they settle their arguments either with them or with knives. The mothers have asked for police protection because it's still dangerous here at 7.30am on the way to school. Many of the dealers are still on the streets." The police deny the West End is getting worse, rejecting the figure of only 15 officers on the streets and pointing to the the14,000 arrests they have made this year, compared with about 11,000 last year. A spokeswoman said Charing Cross and West End Central police stations have introduced new night shifts which produce about 25 officers on patrol from each station. They are backed up by mobile Territorial Support Groups of officers. Recent crackdowns on drug dealing and robbery have included Project Lilac and Operation Upright, high-profile attacks on crime hotspots. Increased attention has also been paid to night bus routes to make them safer. "I think you'll find that stories about people finding hypos [syringes] on the way to school are a thing of the past," said a police spokeswoman. "And we've made big inroads on drug-dealing. Along Moor Street, Berwick Street and Gerrard Street, we recently took out 19 dealers who ended up with a total of 44 years in prison." But as Simon Milton points out, there are 42,000 police in New York City, compared with just 28,000 in London, a metropolis of about the same size. The West End is, he says, now full. It needs better policing, more transport and fewer people. There should be an overspill into other parts of London. "We need more aggressively physical policing," he said. "We are saturated. We can't take any more. We're not against the idea of a 24-hour city but there are lessons to be learnt first, both here and in other parts of the country. If you want to have longer, staggered, drinking hours, you must have policies to work out what total number of bars and people are acceptable. You have to have acceptable levels of policing. And you have to have adequate transport to disperse people fast so the dealers and criminals have no one to prey on." Wise words that may save the rest of Britain from the West End's painful experiences. But lessons that perhaps should have been learnt long ago from the city that really is the coolest in the world, New York. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk