Bexley Council says there is no danger to the public after part of a wall in Sidcup collapsed onto the pavement.

The wall, In Halfway Street by the Hollies Estate, collapsed into a pile of rubble on Friday as a result of strong winds.

Frank Gould, who often passes through Halfway Street, said the wall had been leaning for "as long as he can remember."

After spotting that part of the wall had fallen down, Mr Gould became concerned the other part of the wall, which was still intact but leaning heavily, would fall onto someone walking by.

He reported the problem to the council, but complained he was met with a "pass it on" attitude.

"When I spoke to a woman at the council, she said they would send an engineer round there but apparently they don't consider it is leaning enough."

Mr Gould is concerned someone could be at risk from walking underneath the part of the wall that is currently leaning, after the other part collapsed.

"Heaven forbid someone is walking past with a pram. It could ruin somebody's bloody life couldn't it?"

A spokeswoman from Bexley Council confirmed the wall was being monitored, but that the state of the wall is the responsibility of the person who owns the garden it is attached to.

She said: "The wall is privately owned and therefore is the responsibility of the landowner.

"On Friday, when our street services team were made aware that the wall had fallen, they immediately sent a technician out to inspect it and to ensure residents were not at risk.

"The technician arranged for the bricks and debris to be removed and following this assessed the wall as safe with no immediate danger to the public, however it will be monitored."