Tuesday, November 02, 2010

A4E Camden: Declan claims breach of contract

For two months now I have been writing that I don't have the documentation of an illegal immigrant to establish my identity. We were robbed of all our money and documents in the Sisters of Mercy's Dellow Day Centre in 2008, and the case was thrown out because the nuns refused to provide the police with CCTV coverage of the robbery (see blog of 4 September Sisters of Mercy revisited - our first YouTube video). It doesn't seem to matter who Declan or I write to, we cannot get Broadway Homelessness and Support to confirm that they will assist me with requesting my Irish Citizenship Certificate from Dublin (see blog of 13 September Broadway will help me become a Spanish citizen!) - it took Broadway over a year and three applications to retrieve Declan's birth certificate from Ireland!

This is Declan's latest on the issue - the letter he refers to from Home Office Minister Lynne Featherstone regarding the interception of our communications is archived here - click to enlarge:



It also very much looks like Declan will be filing his claim for judicial review against Highgate Jobcentre Plus in the High Court on Thursday week (see previous blog The High Court (Judicial Review): Letter before claim). Not only has the Jobcentre failed to forward his appeal for breach of Section 9(6) the Jobseekers Act 1995 to the Tribunals Service for a ruling whether the appeal may go ahead or not, but they have yet to respond to his judicial review "letter before claim" (published in the previous blog). He already has the judicial review claim form (N461) written up and ready to file!



This is an outstanding video which I uploaded to the NAC petition page regarding SCNT or "therapeutic cloning". I have mentioned throughout this blog that Declan's petition to the UN on this essential research has had to be shelved several times because almost no scientist was getting his email in their inbox (notwithstanding that the petition has been signed by no less than 28 Nobel laureates as well as hundreds of scholars and scientists, including recognised authorities from the world's leading universities and research institutes). It's hard to know what it will take to be able to protect our private communications.