Guest Post from Meg Howarth
A crucial question now is whether All Souls College (ASC)
will proceed to complete its ‘binding agreement to sell’ the historic Kensal
Rise Library (KRL) site to Andrew Gillick’s Kensal Properties Ltd (Platinum
Revolver in another guise?). Completion of sale was conditional on vacant
possession, so once ASC was told the police investigation was off, it appears to have wasted no time in
sending in its heavies to demolish the pop-up - thus securing
the necessary vacant possession and enabling the sale contract with Mr
Gillick to be completed.
The embarrassment to ASC that will be caused by any
re-opening of the fraudulent email inquiry is incalculable, particularly if
completion has taken place over the last two days. Already on the defensive
because of the adverse publicity surrounding events last Friday, ASC has
tried to blame the council for its barbarity, citing a seven-months-old
enforcement letter 27 June 2013 to justify its action.
LINK
And here’s the text of an even-earlier letter - May 2012 -
this time from ASC’s bursar to a horrified newspaper reader who’d contacted the
college on hearing of Brent’s own now-notorious dawn raid on the KRL site:
Yes, the College became aware of what happened yesterday and we find it
distressing. We had told the Council that we would have been happy for
them to have kept the Library open, possibly through cooperation with the
Friends of Kensal Rise Library, who had developed an interesting business plan.
This
was not to be however.
The law by which we originally donated the land dictates
that the site now reverts to the College’s freehold. This is not
something we ever wanted to see happen, but because it is the law, is something
we cannot change either’.
Does this once-prestigious institution, noted for its famous
Codrington library, really want to go down in history as the wealthiest of
Oxford’s colleges that couldn’t wait to gain vacant possession in a civilised
fashion before sealing a deal with its chosen developer who’s not yet been
cleared of involvement in the fraudulent email affair?
‘Fools rush in where angels fear to tread’ inevitably
springs to mind.