Saturday, September 04, 2010

Sisters of Mercy revisited - our first YouTube video

This morning the NAC website was nowhere to be seen and I thought that my new hosting company, JustHost, rated the most reliable hosting company in the UK (see blog of 8 August NAC new domain: churchandstate.org.uk), had even closed my account because I couldn't get access to it (graphic below). Two hours later everything was back. On 15 August, 27 Categories and 77 Tags I had at that time were deleted from my WordPress, only to reappear less than an hour later (see graphic here). And NAC pages have also been slowed down with this hosting company to a virtual standstill (see video here), although they are fine now.



The NAC website, first launched in October 2004, has in fact been removed from the internet on three distinct occasions (see About). Most notably, the website was suspended in March 2008 due to a Spamcop report that was drawn up the day after the Home Office denied that a warrant had been issued to intercept Declan's communications!

Below is a video for YouTube which we recorded earlier this week. We revisited some of the places we frequented during the more than 2 1/2 years we were forced to sleep rough on the streets of London by the Department for Work and Pensions. One such place is the RC Sisters of Mercy Dellow Centre, where we were robbed of all our money and documents the morning Declan was due to send his second Request for Priority to the European Court of Human Rights (see here). We are trying to reach out to other targeted individuals before we are forced back to living rough on the streets (see previous blog Declan's case against A4E on YouTube video).



This is the Dellow Centre. The canteen area, which can be seen here, is where we were robbed during the few seconds that Declan did not have our bags in his line of sight (see blog of 18 June Declan robbed in the Sisters of Mercy Dellow Centre). The case was shut down by the police after the nuns refused to provide them with CCTV coverage of the robbery (see blog of 25 June 2008 Police 'No sleeping' sign in the porch):



And this from the Papal Nuncio: