Is strike-hit Birmingham really in decline?

Jonathan Francis wearing a bucket hat and sunglasses. He wears a denim jacket and colourful T-shirt and is holding a microphone.
Image caption,

Jonathan Francis said he had made Birmingham his home

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"It's just like every other place that has issues. There is good and there is bad."

Singer Jonathan Francis was setting up his microphone to begin busking in Birmingham city centre when he spoke to me.

The 25-year-old, originally from Grenada in the Caribbean, has made the UK's second city his home.

It is a place that has recently found its reputation under the spotlight with a seven-week ongoing bin strike leading to claims of streets being plagued by "rats the size of cats".

It has not been enough to put Mr Francis off.

"Birmingham is very down to earth," he explained. "It is filled with multiple cultures and I feel connected to it."

Boarded up shops and people going about their daily business in the city centre.  Paving leads down to the shops where there is a sign saying "shoezone" next to one saying "Dalton Way". People mill past bollards outside the buildings.
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Several shops near The Square shopping centre remain boarded up after its sudden closure

I spoke to people near to The Square shopping centre, which recently closed indefinitely due to what the owners said were health and safety issues.

It is just a short walk from the city's main High Street and world-famous Bull Ring precinct.

But it is currently completely boarded up and has featured in a social media video suggesting Birmingham is full of closed shops.

While Mr Francis called the look of the closed centre "disappointing", he insisted it did not represent the city as a whole.

Alfie Mills has fair hair and is wearing a camo backpack. He is throwing up a rock and roll sign and smiling at the camera. There are people going about their daily business nearby.
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Alfie Mills said Birmingham was a "city of art" in his opinion

Alfie Mills, 19, was born and bred in Birmingham and said it was a place defined by its community and culture.

"It's my home," he said. "It's a bit dirty but it's all right.

"It's a city of art at the end of the day. It's got a reputation but it's not all bad."

Lee Edwards is wearing a white and brown warm jacket. There is a bus behind him. You can tell he is in a busy city centre as people wait at a bus stop behind him.
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Construction worker Lee Edwards said Birmingham was not declining

Lee Edwards, a construction worker, said the city was going through extensive development and he did not believe it was declining.

"If you look around you see so much going on," the 67-year-old said.

"Birmingham is booming."

Mother and daughter Lorelle and Kamille Allen both agreed there were "messy" parts of the city but it was not as bad as people made out.

"Everyone's got a little dodgy part and a dingy little corner," said Kamille.

"It's all right here. It's safe. It's safe where I live at least."

Lorelle and Kamille Allen in Birmingham. There is a busy high street behind them. They are both smiling. Lorelle is wearing black T-shirt and coat. Kamille has a green shirt and a blue jacket.
Image caption,

Lorelle and Kamille Allen said Birmingham was not as bad as people made out

The BBC recently heard from people who said they felt embarrassed to live in the city.

The ongoing strike has left bin bags piled several feet high on some streets and an infestation of rats have attracted significant publicity.

The industrial dispute has been reported by media organisations around the world, with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation among those running stories about rats on the loose. , external

Bin bags pile high near terraced housing, overflowing from wheelie bins near a garden wall in bright sunlight. 
Image source, Getty Images
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Piles of bin bags have become a common sight on some of the city's streets during the bin strike

Advertising executive Trevor Beattie, who is originally from Birmingham, said he believed there would not be too much lasting damage.

"Our glory in the Commonwealth Games passed and the horror of the bin strike will pass," he said.

"We will still be Brum. It will be resolved but in the meantime we'll address it with our Brummie humour."

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