GFTU BGCM 2019 Minutes
hungry, hungry backgrounds and desired to improve their life chances as a
result. Sometimes you have got to make use of your medals. That was
Manchester 2000’s bid for the Olympics. By the way, we have been bidding
for over 40 years, so London 2012 was a long journey and sometimes, as I
have learnt, it does take time, but that is no reason for us to stand on our
laurels or not do the right thing.
This is a shot of Benji Stanley, a 14 year old schoolboy shot dead on the streets of Moss Side on January 3 rd at 8.40 in the evening in 1993. I always
share that image, because it still hurts me now. I feel it in my heart and it
makes me angry, because after that inner city review group I never ever
believed that what I saw in Los Angeles and my other trips around the world
would ever come here. I never believed there would be a gang culture, I never
believed that we could fail a small minutia of society in not giving them a good
educational opportunity and, as a result, see them taken on an apprenticeship
or become entrepreneurial, not become the weed sellers or the hustlers or the
pimps. By the way when I grew up in my generation some of them were, but
that was because they were failed by education and education failed them.
When Benji was shot dead I believe something needed to change.
I was part of Live Aid in 1985. Geldof did it with the F word, I just did it with
sport. 250 metres away from here at the Wembley Conference Centre we
launched the Youth Charter. Everybody was there. Not many people said no to
me then, everybody, public, private, third, community sector. Anyone you can
think of was there intergenerationally and it was a charter that would not be
about the winning, it would be about the taking part. It was to provide young
people with an opportunity to develop in life. Anyone you can think of post-War
in their sporting achievement, irrespective of what they look like, where they
come from, what they believe in, what they sound like, whatever their lifestyle
choice, signed that charter, because we have got Royal charters, why couldn’t
we have a youth charter?
What have we achieved? We have now been going for 26 years. We have
pioneered, proven, empowered, everything, but it has not succeeded, because
everything is a timeline and I can rush through this, because that is just
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