Thousands sign petition protesting Brixton Market’s billionaire landlord DJ Taylor McWilliams
The Texan property investor and DJ is evicting popular local store Nour Cash & Carry
A petition protesting against an eviction notice served by Taylor McWilliams, the billionaire director of property investment firm Hondo Enterprises and member of the DJ collective Housekeeping, has received more than 8,000 signatures.
The Texan DJ, socialite and businessman has ordered the eviction of a family-run store Nour Cash & Carry, which sells inexpensive groceries and has been an integral shop for the local residential and trade community for more than 20 years.
The Save Nour Cash & Carry petition calls the shop a “vital resource to ethnic and immigrant communities”. It serves 90 per cent of restaurants in Brixton Market and the surrounding area, and attracts footfall to neighbouring businesses such as butchers, fishmongers and cafés.
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During the pandemic, Nour has also been donating supplies to food banks and making deliveries to isolated customers.
Now Hondo Enterprises has served Nour Cash & Carry a section 25 notice, ordering the business to leave the premises by July 22 this year.
Hondo Enterprises purchased the freehold and leasehold of Brixton Market in March 2018 for £37.25 million, and promised at the time that “under our stewardship its unique character will be secured for the long term.”
McWilliams also drew protests and criticism in 2014 for constructing segregated entrances for poor and rich residents at the One Commercial Street block of flats developed by Hondo Enterprises in East London.
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While public protests are impossible to host during the pandemic, the campaign to Save Nour Cash & Carry is targeting Housekeeping, the four-man DJ collective McWilliams co-founded in 2012. The campaign has published public records showing that Hondo Enterprises helps to fund Housekeeping.
On April 25 during a live stream hosted by Ibiza club Pacha, protesters targeted the Zoom call with signs on camera and messages of criticism in the chat.
On May 1, Housekeeping announced a new EP on Twitter which drew more than 60 protest replies calling for McWilliams to stop the eviction of Nour.
Housekeeping have since deleted all social media channels associated with the collective.
As well as calling for Nour’s eviction notice to be withdrawn and its lease to be renewed at an affordable rate, Save Nour, Save Brixton are also demanding no rent hikes are enforced on all Brixton Market vendors until the end of 2021 to allow them to cope with the economic stress of COVID-19.
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Support for the campaign has come from across the music industry, including South London’s Gaika who said: “McWilliams benefits from the musical legacy of low income and minority ethnic communities. He is at the front end of a hedge fund-backed plan to reshape Brixton, clearly seeking to socially cleanse the area for quick profit.
“The eviction notices he has served are a betrayal of the values he publicly claims to espouse - though they are perfectly in line with the surface level cultural engagement he exhibits as an artist. He does so on the assumption that those people are voiceless, powerless and indispensable. I need him to know that other artists will resist his intrusion into both their cultural and physical space.”
The campaign can be contacted via savenoursavebrixton@gmail.com.
Sign the petition here, and sign up for campaign updates here. You can also follow it on Instagram and Twitter.
*Update 27/05/20**:* In a statement, a spokesperson for Hondo Enterprises said: “Over the past few years, we have invested extensively within Brixton Market, upgrading the heating, drainage and the infrastructure. However, a lack of power still remains a major challenge with power cuts affecting the 50 traders in Market Row as well as restricting our ability to open new stores in the existing vacant units.
"We have been looking at the best way to address this issue and the only way forward is to build a new electrical substation that UK Power Networks has said has to be situated within a unit currently used by Nour Cash and Carry. We have been in talks with Nour for over a year to try and find the best solution that retains them within the Market and to make sure their rent is affordable.
"After looking at a number of possibilities with Nour, we have agreed to provide a large purpose built unit, paid for by the landlord. The application for this new unit, which was submitted in December, has now been approved and we hope to shortly be able to jointly announce details of a long-term affordable deal for Nour to remain.
"We would like to make clear that we value Nour as an important part of the community and we continue to hope that we can come to a resolution in which Nour remains in a unit within the Market. Hondo recognises that the Markets play a part in thousands of people’s daily lives and is an integral part of what makes Brixton home. We are committed to protecting and enhancing this community asset for many years to come."
Vice reports: "Hondo Entreprises has only just been granted planning permission to build Nour's unit. In the middle of a pandemic, it is unclear how the space will be ready before the Shaheen family is forced to leave in July, as per the eviction notice."
Patrick Hinton is Mixmag's Digital Features Editor, follow him on Twitter
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