Superpower indeed...
A GRANDMOTHER facing eviction for Glasgow’s Commonwealth Games last night pleaded with Alex Salmond to save her home.
Margaret Jaconelli issued an emotional appeal to the First Minister after he backed council chiefs who ruled she should get £30,000 compensation for her lost home.
Mr Salmond was yesterday quizzed over Glasgow City Council’s handling of the affair after the Scottish Daily Express told how he had washed his hands of the local authority’s use of SNP laws. Mrs Jaconelli is now awaiting an appeal hearing to stop the council from handing over her two bedroomed flat to contractors building the athletes’ village.
But rivals accused Mr Salmond of showing a lack of sympathy to the 52-year-old after announcing that the “proper processes” were being followed to evict her from her home in Dalmarnock, Glasgow. The grandmother-of-four lost a legal case at Glasgow Sheriff Court on Tuesday and is now facing being forcibly removed under the Scottish Government’s Commonwealth Games legislation.
Mrs Jaconelli believes that she has been “trampled over” by Glasgow City Council which has offered her just a fraction of the property’s independent valuation of £95,000.
It emerged yesterday that developers had shared £16million for land in Glasgow earmarked for Commonwealth Games sites.
A public inquiry into Mrs Jaconelli’s case was ruled out by Scottish ministers last year.
Mrs Jaconelli, who lives with husband Jack, also 52, said: “Scottish ministers should come in and do the right thing,
the decent thing.
Margaret Jaconelli issued an emotional appeal to the First Minister after he backed council chiefs who ruled she should get £30,000 compensation for her lost home.
Mr Salmond was yesterday quizzed over Glasgow City Council’s handling of the affair after the Scottish Daily Express told how he had washed his hands of the local authority’s use of SNP laws. Mrs Jaconelli is now awaiting an appeal hearing to stop the council from handing over her two bedroomed flat to contractors building the athletes’ village.
But rivals accused Mr Salmond of showing a lack of sympathy to the 52-year-old after announcing that the “proper processes” were being followed to evict her from her home in Dalmarnock, Glasgow. The grandmother-of-four lost a legal case at Glasgow Sheriff Court on Tuesday and is now facing being forcibly removed under the Scottish Government’s Commonwealth Games legislation.
Mrs Jaconelli believes that she has been “trampled over” by Glasgow City Council which has offered her just a fraction of the property’s independent valuation of £95,000.
It emerged yesterday that developers had shared £16million for land in Glasgow earmarked for Commonwealth Games sites.
A public inquiry into Mrs Jaconelli’s case was ruled out by Scottish ministers last year.
Mrs Jaconelli, who lives with husband Jack, also 52, said: “Scottish ministers should come in and do the right thing,
the decent thing.


Leave a comment: