Organisers of a festival that was denied permission to use Morden Park next month have hit out at the "unfair and unjust" decision.

On Monday, Merton Council's licensing committee voted against allowing Diynamic Festival London to take place on September 8, after widespread backlash from the community.

Now without a place to hold the event, the festival will not go ahead in any shape or form.

"We had put our trust into the hands of our local promoter partner MJMK events, but the initial venue in Greenwich was lost due to a commercial decision by the landlord overriding an initial agreement to host the event, and at our replacement venue (Morden Park) they were refused the licence in what we all consider to be an unfair and unjust decision by the licensing committee," a statement from Diynamic Music read on a ticket sales website.

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"Words cannot express how sorry we are to all those who had planned to attend the festival at Morden Park, especially to those who had already made accommodation and travel plans."

The statement added that all tickets would be refunded within a week.

MJMK Events took things step further in its comment on the decision however.

"Indeed, the greatest injustice is that MJMK Events went further to implement every measure conceivable to make the event safe and mitigate any effects on local residents," the statement read.

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"During the hearing, representatives for local residents made inaccurate and unfounded statements in reference to electronic music, which are totally against what we believe London’s culture represents."

Concerns were raised by residents, in large part following the Eastern Electric festival which was held in the park on the weekend of August 4 and 5.

People feared the amount of noise that would be generated from the event would cause numerous weddings enormous disruption.

"The council in our view also paid disproportionate attention to other unrelated events," the MJMK statement continued.

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"To paint all electronic music events with the same misinformed brush further jeopardises this already fragile yet culturally invaluable industry.

"Words cannot express how sorry we are to all those who had planned to attend the festival at Morden Park, especially to those who had already made accommodation and travel plans.

"It is deeply upsetting that the fewer than 20 residential objections from the local community carried more weight than the thousands of Morden residents who did not object and that Diynamic fans have been denied the opportunity to attend what would have been a special event."

A petition was created that opposed the festival being granted a license. It amassed more than 700 signatures.