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Edinburgh Live
Edinburgh Live
World
Charlotte Cox

Cheeky stranger leaves car on fuming family's driveway near airport for days

A disbelieving dad has told how he got up one morning to find some chancer had blocked his driveway with their car - leaving it there for days.

Gobsmacked Zekarias Haile, 51, said he had to wait four days for the driver to return and pick up the vehicle from outside the semi he shares with his wife and two children near Manchester Airport.

Zekarias reckons the rogue vehicle belonged to a holidaymaker flying out from the nearby hub, where parking is at a premium. He told the Manchester Evening News : "Someone, without my permission, had put the car there and they didn’t care.”

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It was Thursday morning last week when Zekarias stepped outside to find the grey Range Rover in question plonked in the driveway at the side of his home. But his initial surprise simmered up to a slow-boiling anger at the audacity of the mystery perpetrator, especially when it was still on his property four days later. The perfect amount of time for a short getaway to warmer climes.

Zekarias, a lecturer in Engineering at Wakefield College, told the Manchester Evening News : “I just went out and it was there.

“Then it was there Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday. On Monday morning when we woke up it was gone.”

Zekarias called the police, who said it was not a criminal offence and there was nothing they could do as his car, which he’d parked on the road, was not being blocked in. The unwanted vehicle, however, had restricted easy access to the garden and, crucially, to their bins.

Zekarias added: “I was very angry but I resisted doing anything to the car - just. I definitely didn’t feel all right about it. We couldn’t access our garden and we couldn’t take out our bins."

The family have been living in Wythenshawe for 14 years and are aware that rogue parking companies operate in the area. They suspect that whoever left the Range Rover could have been working for one of these cowboy outfits.

Zekarias was not happy. (MEN)

He added: “A lady who was out the front when it was left told me the driver was wearing a high-viz jacket so I do believe it was one of those companies. My worry now is that, because I couldn’t do anything about it, it will happen again.

“There are rogue parking firms who claim they are meet and greet and they just park in our area. It’s a violation of my private property.”

Parking around Manchester Airport has long been a thorny topic. In 2016 , an investigation by the Manchester Evening News into firms parking holidaymakers' cars in fields and pub car parks led to a crackdown, but the problem has since reared its head again.

The Manchester Evening News has continued to report issues for both holidaymakers and Wythenshawe residents when it comes to parking around the hub. With official parking at Manchester Airport not always a cheap deal for travellers, some firms looking to undercut them have been known to take short-cuts, while the business potential of parking has even led some homeowners to rent out their driveways for a quick buck.

However, Zekarias has made it clear he has no interest in renting out his driveway, and certainly not to a stranger for free. The Manchester Evening News has contacted Greater Manchester Police for comment.

A spokesman confirmed the matter was not a criminal offence but that the homeowners could approach the council and take civil action. We have approached Manchester Council for comment and to see if there are any ongoing investigations into rogue parking firms.

Manchester Airport say:

“As well as our own wide range of products, there are many reputable operators that serve Manchester Airport. We categorically do not condone the practices of rogue operators, including those that falsely imply customers’ cars will be parked in secure locations and whose activities blight surrounding communities.

“We have worked closely with council trading standards teams and Greater Manchester Police over many years to combat this, and speak regularly with local councillors and residents about their concerns.

“As passenger numbers continue to increase in the wake of the pandemic we will maintain our position on this, working closely with Manchester City Council and Greater Manchester Police."

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