THE long-running dispute between Basildon Council and Dale Farm residents is due to return to the High Court.

On Monday, the travellers won a last-gasp injunction preventing the authority from clearing the UK's largest illegal site after Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart said there was a fear that measures "may go further" than the terms of the enforcement notices.

He directed that Basildon Council should serve a schedule on the residents specifying what was proposed for the 51 unauthorised plots on a plot-by-plot basis. The authority has complied with that order and is now set to put its case before the judge in London.

The Dale Farm representatives have accepted that the enforcement notices were valid in themselves and that the council was entitled to proceed in conformity with them.

However, there was concern about "over-enforcement" resulting in total clearance - including structures entitled to be there.

Bailiffs working for Basildon Council had planned to start the clearance of the six-acre site on Monday, but the operation - which is estimated to be costing more than £1 million per day - was postponed while the legal wrangling is resolved.

Council leader Tony Ball said he was frustrated by the delay but added he was convinced the injunction would be overturned once the authority presented the full facts.

The clearance of Dale Farm follows a decade-long row over unauthorised pitches. There are 34 legal pitches on the neighbouring Oak Lane site.

Basildon Council says that, if it is successful, it will be in a position to start the clearance as early as Saturday.

Members of the International Expert Group Meeting on Forced Evictions, meeting at the UN Human Settlements Programme in headquarters in Nairobi, has written to the traveller community of Dale Farm expressing sympathy, it emerged on Thursday.