Police have “thrown in the kitchen sink” in a bid to shut down a nightclub accused of playing “unacceptable” forms of music, the venue’s owner has claimed.

The future of Dice Bar in Croydon High Street is set to be decided on Friday, when councillors will meeting to review its licence.

Police have submitted 345 pages of supporting documents with their application to Croydon Council’s committee for the club’s licence to be revoked.

The documents are more than 14 times longer than the 24 pages lodged to the same committee last month in support of a licence review of Club 791 in Thornton Heath, a venue that has been the scene of repeated outbreaks of violent crime including a “near-fatal” stabbing.

RELATED: Thornton Heath nightclub Club 791 spared closure despite police bid to shut it down

The Dice Bar application, signed by Sergeant Michael Emery, alleges the venue’s owner Roy Seda has “systematically failed” to uphold licensing objectives meaning “patrons are regularly put at risk of harm.”

It cites more than 50 concerns police have had with the venue between January 1, 2015 and February 21 this year, ranging from fights outside the club and underage drinking to clubbers wearing trainers and stuffed animal heads blocking CCTV cameras.

Sgt Emery said: “Whilst the premises continue to remain open, the public and police continue to be put at risk of harm”.

But Mr Seda said police were blaming him for “anything and everything” in a bid to shut him down.

The application states there have been 27 arrests at the venue, which Mr Seda said amounted to 0.045 per cent of his customers.

He added: “They have thrown in the kitchen sink and everything. They are trying to blame me for anything and everything.

“I have no control over what happens outside the venue, over what people do in a police station, what people to in a kebab shop but they [the police] have put everything in there.”

RELATED: Dice Bar owner allegedly banned from playing bashment music says other venues have been put under pressure to stop playing the genre

Last month Mr Seda told the Croydon Guardian he felt “victimised” and “bullied” by officers who told him his venue played “what this borough finds unacceptable forms of music”.

Police are said to have asked him to play commercial pop music instead of bashment, also known as dancehall, a genre performed by artists including Sean Paul and Shaggy.

Mr Seda, who opened Dice Bar with his wife Farrah in 2012, said licensing officers had pressured him to stop playing bashment because they claimed it “attracts a certain type of person”.

The reported ban sparked accusations of racial profiling by Croydon police and national media coverage, but Chief Supt Andy Tarrant, the borough commander of Croydon police, insisted Mr Seda had voluntarily stopped playing bashment.

There is no mention of the genre in the police’s licence review application.

RELATED: Club 791 owner claims police have banned him playing bashment music at his Thornton Heath club

Among the incidents detailed in the supporting documents is an assault in which a police officer was pushed to the ground and bitten by a man, thought to have been carrying a knife, who had been thrown out of the club for being drunk.

Ten other other assaults on police and door staff are cited, but most took place in High Street between people “believed” to have come from the club.

Police also state Dice Bar breached its licensing conditions in January last year because a CCTV camera that should have given a head and shoulders view of people entering the club was obstructed by a stuffed animal head.

On another occasion police spoke to door staff because “they were allowing people wearing trainers into the bar, even though their dress policy said no trainers”.

The licensing committee will also consider 30 pages of documents submitted by members of the public, all of whom are supportive of the venue.

One customer wrote: “I have never witnessed any crime and disorder occurring at this venue, it’s a great bar in Croydon. I urge the council to keep the venue open”.

Another said: “On the numerous occasions I have been at Dice I have always experienced a pleasant atmosphere and exceptional service from staff and management. My friends and clients have never once felt unsafe”.

The committee, which will meet on Friday morning, could choose revoke or modify the club’s licence, remove Mr Seda as premises supervisor, or dismiss the police’s application.