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Monday, 2nd November 2009 Change Date Latest Issue

Asbo for 'defending right to sleep'

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Published Date: 21 June 2008
A MAN has been hit with an Asbo after wiring together a vacuum cleaner, television, radio and stereo to produce the sound of a "jet landing" and annoy his neighbour.
Omar Makdad claimed he was driven to take revenge against a neighbour following a long-running dispute. The 56-year-old put the appliances, which also included an air compressor, on a timer device plugged in at the mains.

For one minute every hour, the appliances would be powered up simultaneously and deliver a deafening racket. But after leaving his flat on one occasion in Restalrig Road South, the timer broke and the blaring noise stayed on for an hour.

Police were forced to break down the door to turn off the switch after council noise wardens were called to the scene. Mr Makdad told the News that he had started using his vacuum cleaner to wake up his neighbour, who he claimed slept between 5pm and midnight. Mr Makdad claimed the neighbour would then stay up all night and made noises which kept him awake.

He said: "I used a timer for the vacuum cleaner to go on for one minute every hour. That was during a three-week period. I felt I had no choice. If I kept him up during the evening, I thought he would have to sleep at night and I could get peace. People say I'm antisocial, but I was defending my right to sleep.

"I accidentally connected my television, stereo, radio and air compressor to it on the day it broke. It wasn't deliberate. An air compressor doesn't even make much noise."

Mr Makdad claimed the neighbourly dispute stretched back to 2002 when another resident started making loud noise. He also said that the council refused his request to move to another flat.

"The timer breaking was an accident. But I was right to use the vacuum cleaner to wake him up. I had a good reason and it worked. I got more sleep at night."

Jim Hunter, the council's community protection manager, said the noise team had been called to Restalrig two months ago following complaints from neighbours.

He added: "The vacuum cleaner, radio, TV, air compressor and stereo were on a timer to go on a minute at a time. But it went wrong and the noise sounded like a jet landing for one hour. The items were confiscated and the owner has not been to reclaim them."

The wardens have the powers to seize equipment involved with antisocial behaviour and owners must pay £100 to have them returned or the property is destroyed.

Televisions, computers, and stereos were confiscated on 11 occasions between April last year and March, a rise on eight and just one for the previous two years.

A city council spokeswoman said Mr Makdad had been given an interim antisocial behaviour order on June 9. A full hearing will take place at Edinburgh Sheriff Court on July 14.

Mr Makdad's neighbour could not be reached for comment.

Sounding out 27,000 noisy neighbours in city

THE incident involving Mr Makdad was one of 27,000 call-outs attended by noise wardens during the first three years of their existence.

The noise team dealt with 9047 calls between April last year and March, compared with 9255 for the same period in 2006-7 and 8777 for 2005-6.

Fixed penalty notices of £100 can be handed out to persistent perpetrators, with 53 in 2007, 39 in 2006 and 26 in 2005 across the Capital.

Jim Hunter, the council's community protection manager, said the team were used to dealing with unusual situations.

He said: "We had an incident in the New Town last year where a marquee had been set up. The wardens found the decibel level was above the limit, but also learned it was a wedding reception.

"We didn't want to spoil the party as we were told everyone was leaving in half-an-hour on a bus. So our wardens handed out a written warning that they had 30 minutes to desist and they did."

The noise team are given targets to deal with calls within one hour.




Page 1 of 1

 
1

alex paterson,

edinburgh 21/06/2008 13:25:29
Think they got his name wrong,it should be Madkad,he is very lucky he never blew the place apart.
2

Cynicaltalk,

21/06/2008 13:45:29
"I accidentally connected my television, stereo, radio and air compressor to it on the day it broke"

Don't you just hate it when that happens?

You are in a rush to get out of the house and accidentally connect your tv, stereo, radio and air compressor to a timer. I hate it when that happens.

But i'll stump up the 100 quid if i can have the lot.
3

Fifi la Bonbon,

21/06/2008 14:34:25
The story doesn't say what the Council was doing about the original noisy neighbour and the reporter didn't actually speak to the neighbour.
4

gordon aka smoker and proud,

edinburgh 21/06/2008 15:24:07
#3 fifi
i totally agree with you, i live in an area of flats, street bins, no ne has the common sense just to open, dispose and replace the lids quietly, lift lid chuck and drop bang! at all hours! loud music, loud voices shouting all night fridays saturdays and sundays! doors banging the noise wardens only get off their butt when they have to, another waste of council tax money!.what should happen, loud noises=police,confiscation arrest gagging orders and asbos that actually work! (ermmmmm how many times have we read that some one had an asbo and they still didi the same thing?) how can an asbo be policed? the lbp change cops on the streets so often they have no idea of the people that have them? not like the days with the local bobby on the beat! they knew everyone!
5

,

21/06/2008 15:41:21
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
6

,

21/06/2008 15:51:05
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
7

geekpie,

forfar 21/06/2008 17:41:36
I've never tried it, but I reckon a vacuum cleaner, television, radio and stereo would produce the sound of a vacuum cleaner, television, radio and stereo, not the sound of a jet landing.
8

Douglas,

Bathgate 21/06/2008 19:17:26
More like a Hoovercraft I'd say.
9

JT,

22/06/2008 08:46:00
Whilst I cant agree to the method of his madness, cant blame him. As someone who had 9 months of hellish neighbours who played music so loud that glass shook, I can understand. We have to allow people to sleep but we also we have to allow people to put the hoover round, washing machine one, tv and stereo and talk - of course within reasonable limits. Its all about common sense, something we all know the council dont exactly have.
10

Julian.,

edinburgh 22/06/2008 21:39:00
Why does the Council have to destroy this stuff. Couldn't they at least give it to charity? When they keep banging on at us about green issues it's a bit hypocritical to throw away perfectly good things.
11

Julian.,

edinburgh 22/06/2008 21:46:18
"Asbo for 'defending right to sleep'"

Shouldn't it read "Asbo for making such a massive noise for over an hour that the police had to be called to break down your door"?
12

ohmahernia,

edinburgh 22/06/2008 23:02:53
More Top Stories Like this please.

It's sad but truly comical. Back to the trams soon i suppose.
13

Smasher,

23/06/2008 08:40:10
He should have just bought a jet and parked it next to his neighbours adjoining wall. Would have saved all the complications of setting timers etc.
14

Findlay Thompson,

23/06/2008 10:06:45
13
You should not treat this story so flippantly, for all we know Mr Omar Madbomna could be an dislimic Bundementalist mole who is highly skilled in creating bombs out of household cleaning devices!
15

Edin,

23/06/2008 12:37:40
you should get an asbo for that comment 15 !!!!!!!!!
16

Findlay Thompson,

23/06/2008 12:43:11
16

Why?
17

Julian.,

edinburgh 23/06/2008 21:53:16
17,

Probably comes under racial incitement.
18

hibbie,

Edinburgh 10/09/2009 11:55:06
It is funny till it happens to you then it is a different story, I have noisy bas*tards, jaiky's living in a rented flat paid for by the DSS next to me and these aaarseholes play loud music all the time plus continual banging, they have been reported and other neighbours are keeping a diary, but it takes too long to get the council to do anything about them, I am not surprised the guy resorted to some payback.

 

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