Huge west London tower block inferno – Grenfell Tower fire

For the second time in a week, anger erupted at a meeting called by Kensington and Chelsea Council and London’s Metropolitan Police.

Angry Grenfell survivors and residents berate London police and council officials 20 July 2017
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/07/20/gren-j20.html

A meeting Tuesday was held almost five weeks to the day of the June 14 Grenfell fire, with around 150 people gathered at the Notting Hill Methodist church in North Kensington. The meeting was called by the “Grenfell Response Team,” established by the government and the local council following the fire.

Noticeable by her absence was council leader Elizabeth Campbell, who was denounced by residents last week over the role of the council in creating a death trap of Grenfell Tower and its inhumane treatment of the survivors and local residents in the aftermath.

Speaking on behalf of the Conservative-run council was Barry Quirk, the interim chief executive. There were no representatives from the Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation (KCTMO)—the arms-length organisation that ran Grenfell Tower on behalf of the council.

Representing the Metropolitan Police was Detective Inspector Simon Fox, who is responsible for the recovery of bodies at the scene. Around a dozen uniformed police officers were dotted around the room creating an intimidating atmosphere.

The attempt by the authorities to try to placate anger by putting some fresh faces onto the platform did not work. Local resident Jacqui Haynes said, “Because of that, they can also get away by saying ‘Oh that wasn’t us, we weren’t there’ or ‘We are looking into what we do now’. What they’ve done is take away the people who are responsible so they don’t have to answer, and they just put in people who can’t answer, because they weren’t there.

Many shouted “liars” as the panel sought to justify their inaction and failure to bring anyone to account for the deaths of at least 80 people. Others shouted that the cabinet of Kensington and Chelsea Council and the police leading the criminal investigation should resign.

The hostility directed at the platform was centered on condemnations of them as representatives of the ruling elite, who only cared about the interests of the rich.

A survivor, Mahad, said that residents of council housing estates in north Kensington, where Grenfell Tower is located, were not “poor or uneducated... We are rich, rich in dignity.” Pointing at the platform he said, “You are dishonouring all of us, traumatising a whole community… You have been put in a position of trust and you have let the people down.”

Opposing the long-term goal of the council to socially cleanse the area of working class residents, he said, “We will look after our children and our future. There’s no way… that you who work for the rich folks are going to push us out of our homes and our community.”

Another woman demanded to know why Campbell was not at the meeting, stating, “I want to know where the leader of the council is... These bloody people suffer all their lives. They work for you lot to get your bloody wages… Why isn’t she here telling us what’s happened?”

Seventeen year old Rihanna described how her eight-year-old nephew was greatly distressed at losing his teacher in the fire: “Growing up in this community, I loved it. But this whole tragedy has made me see that we have no support from you... It’s hard to watch people fall, jump, lose their families.”

Another resident described the Grenfell inferno as “This disgusting thing that has happened to our children and our families. The TMO [Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation] is nowhere to be seen… This isn’t right. It’s the TMO’s fault and the TMO has to sit in the chair in front of all these people and answer the questions. They don’t care about those lives. The government’s going on holiday this week. Yeah, ‘everything’s finished.’ No it won’t finish!”

Residents vented their anger at the fact that only a fraction of the £20 million raised by charities and fundraisers for the victims of the Grenfell fire had been distributed. A BBC report revealed that just £800,000 has been handed to those affected. The Red Cross donated £4.8 million to the London Emergency Trust, who are tasked with distributing the money. However, they have handed over only £158,000 so far to just 16 of the people affected.

Residents spoke out against the callous indifference of the government and local authority to the survivors, who five weeks on have not been rehoused, despite a personal pledge by Prime Minister Theresa May. One audience member said to applause, “When are you going to house them? We know there are people who are booked into hotels until September 1. When are you going to give them housing?”

From the first hours after the Grenfell fire, central and local government did nothing to assist devastated survivors who had lost family members and everything they owned. The local working class community were left to fend for themselves, with other residents nearby forced to step in to provide basic supplies and shelter for the victims. How wide the gulf is between the powers-that-be and residents was demonstrated when an audience member asked every person from the community who had volunteered to help after the fire to stand up. He said, speaking about the council, this is “every single person who does your job,” as around a third of the room stood up.

The catalogue of crimes committed by the political elite and corporations that resulted in the Grenfell inferno, and which fuels the resentment of residents towards them, continues to grow by the day.

On the day of the meeting, the government revealed that 243 buildings in 57 local authority areas that have cladding similar to that on Grenfell had failed combustibility tests. This represents a 100 percent failure rate. Of these, 235 are high-rise residential towers, a combined school/residential building, another school and six buildings at five National Health Service trusts.

The day after the meeting it emerged that the cladding and insulation that Grenfell was encased in generated the same amount of heat as would burning 51 tonnes of pinewood. According to research carried out on the cladding’s plastic core by the University of Leeds, it would have burned “as quickly as petrol.” Planning documents seen by the university revealed that 18 tonnes of insulation foam and eight tonnes of cladding panels were attached to the tower.

The uncoordinated and ad hoc removal of dangerous cladding from tower blocks is creating even greater dangers. In many cases, external cladding has been removed from high rises by local authorities only to leave highly combustible insulation exposed. In the city of Salford, combustible insulation has been left exposed for weeks on blocks that house more than 1,000 people.

A fire safety expert, Arnold Tarling, told the Guardian that Pendleton Together Housing—the housing association who run the blocks on behalf of Labour-run Salford Council—had “exposed insulation on the exterior of a building.” This “is not safe because of the risk of the fire spreading over the surface. It doesn’t comply with building regulations... They have guaranteed there is definitely a fire risk.”


Also:
Grenfell Fire—Social Murder: A crime against the working class 21 July 2017
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/07/21/ukpu-j21.html
 
Met says Grenfell Tower council 'may have committed corporate manslaughter'

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/jul/27/met-says-grenfell-council-may-have-committed-corporate-manslaughter

In a letter sent to survivors and the families of those who died, police said the decision to identify two organisations as suspects, follows the seizing of documents and taking of a large number of witness statements.

In their letter, police said: “After an initial assessment of that information, the officer leading the investigation has today notified Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea and the Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation that there are reasonable grounds to suspect that each organisation may have committed the offence of corporate manslaughter, under the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007.”
 
Reports of several suicide attempts and outlets pushing drugs to vulnerable survivors of the Grenfell Tower blaze that devastated West London in June, have shocked people once again, as campaigners are calling for more help from the British government.

High Rate of PTSD and Suicide Attempts Among Grenfell Tower Survivors in London
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201708011056079120-uk-grenfell-survivors-ptsd-suicide/

The Grenfell Tower fire tore a community apart. In the days after the tragedy, missing picture posters of loved ones filled the streets.

However one month on, as bodies are identified and funerals take place, people are slowly coming to terms with their loss and the fact that this fire, which killed at least 80 people, really did happen.

The latest body to be identified was that of two-year-old Jeremiah Deen.

​Many of the survivors and family members of people who perished are suffering from post-traumatic stress syndrome (PTSD) which is defined as an anxiety disorder caused by a very "stressful, frightening or distressing event."

Judy Bolton, a clinical nurse and coordinator of the Justice for Grenfell campaign told Sputnik that the help from local and national government has been minimal and more needs to be done to ensure those suffering from PTSD are helped.

The UK government or gold command has said they will provide mental health services, to those who are traumatized and obviously in a terrible state. But they are expected to go to them and access these services. So it's not a referral, it's if you feel that you need mental health support, you have to go to them, which beggars belief as many people wouldn't recognize or even know the symptoms of stress, distress, trauma or suicide," Ms. Bolton told Sputnik.

This is an unprecedented event and I would have hoped that the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea would have actually seen the need to go to the survivors and bereaved families because they also are traumatized as well," Ms. Bolton added.

Judy Bolton is all too familiar with the symptoms of PTSD, as a trained clinical nurse, Ms. Bolton has seen the impact of the condition, comparing it to the grieving process.

People will be in denial, many will still be living in disbelief that this has happened, but soon the realization kicks in and the person, unable to cope with their loss and the situation, isolates themselves and stops talking in a bid to deal with the pain.

"With PTSD you are not able to rationally process, it's too much, and so people will go into themselves. Also they will go through erratic sleeping, sometimes not even sleeping. Also anxiety — it can paralyze you… You may see someone withdrawn and zapped out in a chair, not moving or blinking and they are locked in their own trauma," Ms. Bolton told Sputnik.

"I spoke to one gentlemen, he has worked all his life… he saved his partner and child from the fire, but now he has to sleep with the light on because he is scared to go to the bathroom at night," Ms Bolton said.

Signs of PTSD are palpitations, difficulty breathing, dizziness, sweating of hands and face. Ms. Bolton said people will also have an irrational fear of going outside and may develop agoraphobia.

Several reports of people trying to commit suicide have recently surfaced. Ms. Bolton is unable to discuss the details in order to protect people's privacy, but she says the trauma of surviving the fire has led many to want to commit suicide or self-medicate with drugs.

"The police are very aware of the drug dealers in the area. They are very aware of certain outlets that provide illicit drugs […]. We have had an influx of people outside of the area coming in to capitalize on the misery. Again those who seek to capitalize only have to ask questions, the drug dealers are more organized than gold command. Again, it's down to Notting Hill police to ensure they go to the outlets and shut these things down," Ms. Bolton told Sputnik

With cuts being made to every area of mental health, accessing support is not easy.

Ms. Bolton commends the local services that have helped thus far, but says waiting times are so long that support has had to be provided by the community.

"We have volunteers who go out at night and help those who can't sleep. Even at 3am you see people walking the streets as they can't sleep. So you have volunteers who will help people and talk to them.

"What we need is a safe place that is accessible 24 hours a day for people to be able to come and help, and receive help [….] People are in a real state and it's a collective state of PTSD," Ms. Bolton concluded.
 
Ant22 said:
I'm not sure if this is the right place to put it but there was another fire in London, this time in the Camden Lock Market.

After Grenfell Tower followed by fire in an East London residential building block I agree with one of the commenters under the article: London has been burning a lot recently.

https://www.rt.com/uk/395826-london-camden-market-fire/
It took over three hours for dozens of firefighters and at least ten trucks to control the fire that erupted in the Camden Lock area of London at the busy tourist market.

According to the latest information, ten fire engines and 70 firefighters have been sent to tackle the flames at the Camden Lock Market, London Fire Brigade said in a Tweet.

Authorities have cordoned off part of Camden Market, a popular tourist destination. Firefighters are urging the public to avoid the Camden Lock area.

London's fire department said floors 1-3 of the building, located "within the market," as well as the roof were alight.

London Ambulance Service said that it has not treated any patients after being called in at 12.07 am.

“We sent a clinical team leader and our Hazardous Area Response Team (HART) to the scene," it said in a statement, the Independent quotes. “We have not treated any patients, and we remain at the scene.”

The cause of the fire has not yet been established.

Shortly after 3:00 am, the London Fire Brigade announced that the "fire is now under control" adding that the crew "will be damping down into the morning."

The blaze comes less than a month after a horrific fire at a 24-story building in West London in which at least 80 people were killed. Grenfell Tower, which was home to around 600 people, burned to the ground after flammable cladding contributed to the rapid spread of the fire.

Is the Market in this article - the same as the one identified above or is this a different one?

The planned demolition of Britain’s largest Latin American market to make way for luxury shops and apartments puts hundreds of livelihoods at risk and will tear the heart out of the community, a campaign group warns.

Bulldozing London’s beloved Latin American market will ‘ethnically cleanse’ area, traders tell RT
https://www.rt.com/uk/399215-latin-american-market-gentrification/
 
angelburst29 said:
Ant22 said:
I'm not sure if this is the right place to put it but there was another fire in London, this time in the Camden Lock Market.

After Grenfell Tower followed by fire in an East London residential building block I agree with one of the commenters under the article: London has been burning a lot recently.

https://www.rt.com/uk/395826-london-camden-market-fire/
It took over three hours for dozens of firefighters and at least ten trucks to control the fire that erupted in the Camden Lock area of London at the busy tourist market.


Is the Market in this article - the same as the one identified above or is this a different one?

The planned demolition of Britain’s largest Latin American market to make way for luxury shops and apartments puts hundreds of livelihoods at risk and will tear the heart out of the community, a campaign group warns.

Bulldozing London’s beloved Latin American market will ‘ethnically cleanse’ area, traders tell RT
https://www.rt.com/uk/399215-latin-american-market-gentrification/

Good find angelburst29! The Latin American Market is a different one but not the first one to face closure. A couple of years ago another place, the Shepherds Bush Market was at risk of being closed down after decades for exactly the same reason: the local council wanted to build luxury flats in that location. The Shepherds Bush Market eventually won the battle but what's interesting is that the Shepherds Bush area is the home of the Westfield shopping centre with its luxury shopping brands. Whilst the Shepherds Bush Market is a cheap alternative for people who prefer to buy their groceries from locals - at a reasonable price.

This, combined with information you shared in your earlier post does look like the Grenfell Tower is just a symptom of a much bigger issue.
 
I'm not really seeing much information on this situation? What happened to the residents of the other five apartment Tower's that were evacuated? Were they allowed to go back to their apartments?

At least 20 residents and witnesses of the terrifying block fire that engulfed London’s Grenfell Tower have attempted suicide, according to an anti-suicide group, underscoring the government’s lack of attention to the victims’ mental health.

Charity: At Least 20 Grenfell Residents, Witnesses Attempted Suicide
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13960614000899

Volunteers working with survivors of the June 14 blaze at the 24-story building in west London have confirmed the latest number, Yvette Greenway, founder of Silence of Suicide charity said, presstv rreported.

Justice4Grenfell's Judy Bolton also verified the figure, citing members of the campaign who have been helping the victims’ families.

Some residents have resorted to alcohol and drugs as a desperate attempt to get the images of the burning tower "out of their minds," Greenway told BBC.

"There is a lot of alcohol and drug dependency," she said. "People are feeling isolated."

British Police, investigating the Grenfell Tower fire, say they have “reasonable grounds” to suspect that corporate manslaughter offences may have been committed.

There was little to no interest among survivors to use “council-led” mental health services due to workers’ reluctance to attend to the victims.

"We've been told workers are going around putting leaflets under hotel doors and not actually speaking to people," she said.

"There are going to be many more instances of PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder), depression, anxiety and self-harming as people reach different stages of trauma,” she noted, asking for the years to come.

"We need long-term mental health provision for the next three decades at least… maybe longer," Greenway said.

Bolton, a nurse of 20 years, who has been working voluntarily with Justice4Grenfell, told BBC that mental health services needed to go to the victims instead of waiting for them to seek help.

Depression, survivor guilt and feeling unable to cope with the loss of loved ones were some of the pressing issues that the nurse said required prompt attention from the authorities.

A Labour MP says contractors are removing evidence that might incriminate them in the recent tower fire in London.

“There just isn't the proper psychiatric help that people need," she said. "They need trauma and bereavement counseling urgently.”

The lack of proper mental health support has forced some people to seek drugs and self-medication in order to “shut out the trauma,” she added, noting that the area was flooded with drug dealers.

"People saw their neighbors falling from a burning building, they saw children being dropped from the building,” Bolton said. "There are still ashes still blowing over us when the train goes past We're being covered in the ash of our dead friends and relatives."
 
The number of people killed in June by the horrific fire at the 24-story tower block of flats in London has been lowered, while numerous allegations of theft and looting as well as cases of fraud remain at the center of the disaster’s aftermath.

Fraud and Looting in London's Grenfell Tower as Fire Death Toll Falls to 71
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201711161059155838-grenfell-tower-fire-fraud/

The Metropolitan Police have confirmed the final death toll from Grenfell Tower fire in west London has fallen from 80 to 71, including a stillborn baby. The victims include Logan Gomes, a baby boy who was stillborn in hospital hours after his mother survived the blaze in the 24-story block on June 14.

Commander Stuart Cundy, who is leading the criminal investigation into the fire, said fraudulent claims were one of a number of factors behind the fall in the death toll.

Fake Victim Posed With Prince Charles - Anh Nhu Nguyen, 52, will be sentenced next month after pleading guilty to fraud. He claimed his wife, his son and all his "worldly possessions" in the blaze.

He posed as a victim for two weeks and was photographed with the Prince of Wales but later admitted he had made it all up to claim £10,000 in food, clothes and accommodation.

Cmdr. Cundy said several other people who had been feared missing had turned up safe and well either in Britain or in other countries.

The identities of the last two bodies — Victoria King, 71, and her daughter Alexandra Atala, 40 — were confirmed by the coroner, Dr. Fiona Wilcox, on Tuesday, November 14.

"I have been clear from the start that a priority for us was recovering all those who died, and identifying and returning them to their families. I cannot imagine the agony and uncertainty that some families and loved ones have been through whilst we have carried out our meticulous search, recovery and identification process," said Cmdr. Cundy.

Hundreds of Tons of Debris - He said the police had conducted a fingertip search of every inch of the tower and had accumulated 17 tons of debris on each floor.

"That has all been put into storage and is now the property of the coroner. There may be miniscule amounts of human debris within it and it is likely the coroner will decide to bury it eventually, but that is a decision for her," said Cmdr. Cundy during a briefing on Thursday, November 16.

"After the fire was finally put out I entered Grenfell Tower and was genuinely concerned that due to the intensity and duration of the fire, that we may not find, recover and then identify all those who died," he said.

Cmdr. Cundy also confirmed they were investigating seven allegations of theft from looted flats on the lower floors of the tower.

He said scaffolding was being erected around the building at the moment and the entire edifice will be wrapped in the next couple of months so it will eventually be hidden from view.

Cmdr. Cundy said he expected to conclude the examination of the building in the spring of 2018 and then hand it over to Kensington and Chelsea Council, who would then decide how and when to demolish it.

He said in the spring of next year he expected to begin physical and computerized modeling of how the fire started and spread to help the investigators understand exactly what happened and whether anyone is criminally responsible.

In June he estimated around 80 people had died and in September he said that figure may come down.

293 People in Grenfell Tower on Night of the Fire - Detectives have scoured large amounts of CCTV and police body worn video footage to identify everyone captured on film escaping Grenfell Tower after the fire started just before 1am.

Cmdr. Cundy said he was confident 223 people escaped Grenfell Tower that night and survived, including Logan's mother, Andreia Gomes, who lived on the 21st story.

"The scale and the challenge of the criminal investigation is huge. We have not arrested anybody yet, except for the fraud investigations," said Cmdr. Cundy.

He said his investigation was continuing in parallel to the public inquiry, which announced on Wednesday, November 15, that its timetable would be discussed at a procedural hearing on December 11.
 
Six months after a fire ripped through the Grenfell Tower apartment block in London killing 70, survivors are traumatized and bitter, saying they have been abandoned to their fate.

Survivors traumatized six months after London tower blaze Monday 11 December 2017
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1207166/world

At the end of November, 208 households have found a permanent home, but there are still 123 others living in emergency accommodation, the majority in a hotel.

“You said this is history — this has not been history for me, I’ve lived this every day for the last six months,” said a young woman, trembling, during a meeting organized by the authorities on Tuesday.

Her mother lived on the 23rd floor of the building in west London, but was not at home when the blaze struck on the night of June 14.

Seventy people were killed in the fire, including a number of children, while a stillborn baby was additionally recorded by police as a victim.

“My mum is going to be 67 and she is still in a hotel — she has been in a hotel for six months,” the woman said, criticizing a “lack of empathy” from authorities.

With Christmas approaching, the director of the Justice4Grenfell Association, Judy Bolton, is worried about the families who fled the flames. “Has anybody thought about the impact on those in hotels facing Christmas in one room with children, not being able to cook a Christmas dinner, to sit around the table?” she said.

“What have you put in place to ensure that these people don’t feel isolated, don’t feel left apart, don’t feel ignored?” Bolton asked.

Mary Weale, responsible for communities within Grenfell’s borough of Kensington and Chelsea, acknowledged that the festive season “is often a time of heightened stress, anxiety and depression.” “As Christmas approaches we have to be particularly concerned about suicide risks,” she said, explaining the council aimed “to identify people at risk and focus on them.” Weale described mental heath as an “enormous issue,” recognizing that survivors will need support for years to come.

Some survivors argue they have not received the help they need.

“My mum gave birth to me in that tower, on that 10th floor,” said Ishmael Francis-Murray, who said he hasn’t received any assistance. “My kids are not sleeping,” he added, while the blackened tower block looms over the neighborhood as a constant reminder of the deadly blaze.

The streets are covered with small yellow ribbons, teddy bears and tokens of affection left for the victims, alongside the words “truth” and “justice” which hint at the widespread mistrust of the authorities.

Some people believe that the police underestimated the death toll, announced last month after an unprecedented search operation, arguing that it did not fully take into account people living in the tower illegally.

A public inquiry being led by a retired judge has also been challenged. A petition calling on Prime Minister Theresa May to “build public trust” in the inquiry has gained more than 15,000 signatures, including the support of singer Adele.

The aftermath of the fire has seen numerous marches to remember the victims and another will take place on Thursday, the six-month anniversary, in addition to a service at St. Paul’s Cathedral.
 
The Times’ claim that Grenfell fire outrage was ‘fomented by RT’ is ‘obscene’ – George Galloway
RT Published on Dec 11, 2017

https://youtu.be/KskzPYk2Kwg
British newspaper The Times has thrown some accusations at this network regarding our coverage of the UK's Grenfell tower tragedy. In its article, The Times accuses RT of attempting to ignite a class war in Britain with its coverage of the tragic event. READ MORE: https://on.rt.com/8uhx
 
Eight months after an inferno claimed the lives of 70 people and an unborn baby at a tower block in west London, nobody has been arrested. Fresh calls for "justice" were made at a public meeting in the shadow of the tower.

Grenfell Blaze: Firefighters' Leader Says 'The Big Criminals' Should be Arrested
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201802021061295880-grenfell-tower-public-meeting/

Matt Wrack, the general secretary of the Fire Brigades Union, said the "big criminals, and not just the little criminals" needed to be brought to justice.

"An interesting point has been raised today — 71 people are dead and yet nobody has been arrested for it and questions have been asked about why nobody has been arrested for it and people have to start to wonder whether anyone will be arrested for it," he told a cheering crowd at the Maxila Social Club in North Kensington on Thursday, February 1.

"Because this was a crime. This was an atrocity. It wasn't an atrocity caused by war or terrorism. If it had been war or terrorism I think the reaction would have been different. This is people who were killed in their own home and questions have to be asked about how and why that happened," said Mr. Wrack.

Faulty Freezer Started Fire - The fire, believed to have been caused by a faulty freezer, broke out in the early hours of June 14, 2017 and spread rapidly throughout the 23 story tower block, trapping many residents on the upper floors.

The rapid spread of the blaze has been attributed to flammable cladding which was fitted to the side of the building during a refurbishment. Reports have suggested it was chosen over an inflammable alternative because it was a few thousand pounds cheaper.

Mr. Wrack read out an excerpt from a meeting in the House of Commons in 1999, when the FBU warned about the risk from flammable cladding after a man — William Linton — died at a fire in Garnock Court in Irvine, Scotland.

Changes to the Law Only in Scotland - The fire led to changes in building regulations in Scotland in 2005 which made it mandatory for builders to ensure any external cladding "inhibited" fire spreading but no such change was made in England, leading inevitably to the deaths at Grenfell.

He said time and time again recommendations were made by inquests and public inquiries but were not followed through by the politicans.

"So when it comes back to the question of arrests let's not just go for the little criminals, let's go for the big criminals as well," said Mr. Wrack.

"Questions need to be asked of the fire brigade," admitted Mr. Wrack, including of the "stay put" policy, but he said it was based on their understanding of "compartmentation", which is designed to restrict the spread of fire.

​"When that building (Grenfell) was built the architects built fire safety into the construction of the building. How has compartmentation…been compromised so that fire spreads beyond the original flat of origin," said Mr. Wrack.

He also mentioned that Friday, February 2, is the anniversary of the death of two firefighters, Michael Millar, 26, and Jeff Wornham, 28, who died while tackling a fire in a tower block in Stevenage, north of London, in 2005.

98 Grenfell Households Still Not Rehoused - Emma Dent Coad, the Labour MP for Kensington, said she was furious that 98 households from Grenfell were still waiting to be permanently rehoused despite the Prime Minister Theresa May saying, at the time of the fire, that everybody would be rehoused within three weeks.

Clarrie Mendy, who lost two cousins in the fire, said the authorities had simply waited for the "hullabaloo" to quieten down after the blaze and had then "gone back to business".

There were angry scenes at the meeting, held only a few hundred yards away from the blackened hulk of the tower, with one resident at one point shouting at the panel: "What is this meeting about? What are we talking about? You don't represent me."

A number of survivors and bereaved relatives are understood to be undergoing counseling for the trauma of the night of June 14.

Call For Tower To Be Covered - Laura Sothern, a resident of North Kensington, called on the council to cover the building urgently and said the sight of it was exacerbating people's mental health problems.

"Killing people in the tower was not enough. Now they are torturing people and people are not able to open their curtains because of the sight of the tower. How many resources are going into covering it?" she said.

In July last year promises were made to wrap the tower before the Notting Hill Carnival in August but the building remains uncovered.

"Unless we push hard for the tower to be covered we are going to get a lot of people breaking down. If they cover the tower within a reasonable time they can stay in their homes. It will help the whole of London," Ms. Sothern told the meeting.

"It's essentially a grave. A huge mass grave and it should be covered up," Ms. Sothern told Sputnik later.
 
Not much of a write-up - considering it has taken them eleven months - to get to this point?

Mon May 21, 2018 - UK: Public Inquiry into Grenfell Fire Disaster Opens
Farsnews

A public inquiry into the deadly Grenfell Tower fire in London, which last June claimed the lives of 72 people, started on Monday.

More than 500 survivors, grieving families, and friends, as well as North Kensington residents, are taking part in the inquiry, being held in a local hotel, Anadolu Agency reported.

This first phase of the inquiry will look into the facts such as how and where the fire started and spread and how the building was evacuated.

The mid-June 2017 fire was blamed on a faulty fridge, according to earlier reports. The blaze spread quickly due to the building’s cladding (covering), which was thought to have worked as an accelerator.

The final death toll of 72 included a stillborn baby, according to the British police.

The public inquiry was ordered by Prime Minister Theresa May shortly after the inferno, and a separate police inquiry is still underway to determine the cause and the reasons for the high death toll in the disaster.
 
06.06.2018 - Lawyer Calls for Owner of Apartment Sparking Grenfell Blaze to be Cleared
Lawyer Calls For Owner of Apartment Sparking Grenfell Blaze to be Cleared

Almost exactly a year on from the disaster, the man in whose apartment the fire started still faces damaging accusations of responsibility, according to his lawyer.

The inquiry into the causes and responsibility for the June 2017 Grenfell Tower blaze which killed at least 71 residents, has heard calls from the lawyer of the owner of the apartment in which the blaze began to be formally cleared of any responsibility for the disaster

Mr. Behailu Kebede, originally from Ethiopia, lived in the 16th apartment on the fourth floor of the North Kensington block which has been identified as the fire's point of origin.

In his evidence to the inquiry, Mr. Kebede's lawyer Rajiv Menon said, "Mr Kebede hopes that having heard all the evidence, the inquiry will make a clear and unequivocal statement that Mr Kebede was absolutely blameless for the outbreak of the fire, its spread and its fatal consequences," lawyer Rajiv Menon said according to Reuters.

Mr. Menon continued, claiming that his client was the victim of "sleazy accusations" implying that he was in some way culpable for the fire which engulfed the building and led to the UK's worst loss of life in a housing disaster since the Second World War.

If the inquiry does not explicitly exonerate Mr Kebede all the sleazy accusations and hurtful innuendo, all the racist assumptions and ignorance about Mr Kebede that currently prevail will continue unabated," Mr. Menon continued.

Attention quickly turned to the cladding used to fire-proof the building which seemed instead to have enabled the fire to spread more rapidly throughout the structure.

The blaze caused an outcry in Britain over the state of lower-income and government provided housing and has led to investigations into hundreds of apartment blocks across the country which have found the same kind of hazardous cladding.
 
Detectives have arrested eight men and a woman who are suspected of falsely claiming they lived in the UK's fatal Grenfell Tower block. Police also confirmed on Thursday that senior fire officers could face charges under the Health and Safety Act.

07.06.2018 - Police Carry Out Raids in London and Arrest Nine for Grenfell Fraud
Police Carry Out Raids in London and Arrest Nine for Grenfell Tower Fraud

Detective Superintendent Matt Bonner said the nine suspects were alleged to have received between £25,000 and £100,000 each in benefits or accommodation. Some had been living in hotels ever since the night of the fire on June 14, 2017.

Det. Supt. Bonner said the police were conscious of next week's anniversary and "consulted with the community where we could" before launching the raids. He insisted none of those arrested were "survivors."

"These individuals that we have arrested and those previously convicted do not represent the Grenfell community. They have attached themselves to a community to exploit and make financial gain… They risk wrongly labeling the community," Det. Supt. Bonner told reporters at a briefing at Scotland Yard.

Police also said the official death toll from the fire remained 71 — 70 people and an unborn baby.

Commander Stuart Cundy said Maria Del Pilar Burton, 74, who died in January was a "victim of the fire" but the coroner had ruled that her death was not as a direct result of the fire.

Also on Thursday, June 7, Stephen Walsh QC, counsel for the London Fire Brigade, said it was a "fundamental misunderstanding" to assume that fire commanders could change the "stay put" policy at any time when the building was not designed for a mass evacuation.

"If there is no policy applied by the building owner which provides for a policy of simultaneous evacuation and there are no evacuation plans and there are no general fire alarms — what is an incident commander on the fire ground to do?" he told the Grenfell Tower Inquiry

Cmdr. Cundy also confirmed Grenfell Tower remained a "crime scene" and would do until at least July or August. He said he would hand it over to Kensington Council when he was satisfied that an off-site testing facility was ready.
 
RT
Grenfell Tower 1 year on: Going Underground at ground zero (VIDEO)
Edited time: 13 Jun, 2018 11:49
One year on from the fire which killed 72 people, Going Underground goes back to Grenfell Tower. Host Afshin Rattansi talks to victims, protest organizers and those who tried to battle the blaze.

The Going Underground team speaks to Zeyad Cred, the organizer of the Silent Marches which remembered those lost in the horrific blaze on the 14th of every month. Senior firefighter Lucy Masoud also sat down with the team to discuss the depoliticisation of the worst tower block fire in recent UK history. Plus, Going Underground talks to Father Alan Everett, Vicar of St Clement Church about the effect the tragedy has had on the community.

Ep. 622: Grenfell 1 Year Anniversary w/ Local Heroes Zeyad Cred, Lucy Masoud & Reverend Alan Everett
https://youtu.be/ZoRb08l48EQ
Published on Jun 13, 2018 / 28:29
In this special episode, we talk to those helping the poorest community in one of the richest areas on earth. We speak to the organiser of the Silent Marches which have commemorated the dead on the fourteenth of every month, Zeyad Cred. Senior firefighter, Lucy Masoud, warns of the depoliticisation of the worst tower block fire in recent UK history. Plus, we talk to Father Alan Everett, Vicar of St Clement Church.
 
20-Story London Apartment Block Ablaze Year After Grenfell Fire - Reports
(updated 11:44 14.06.2018)
MOSCOW (Sputnik) - A fire broke out in a 20-story apartment building in London's Lewisham on Thursday, precisely the day when the United Kingdom is commemorating the victims of last year's deadly blaze in Grenfell Tower, media reported.

About 150 people left the apartment block on Elmira Street before the firefighters arrived, The Telegraph reported.
According to the London Fire Brigade, the fire broke out early in the morning on the balcony of a flat on the 13th floor and was contained within about two hours.



The incident happened exactly one year after the Grenfell Tower tragedy, when a fire in a 24-story residential high-rise in western London claimed the lives of over 70 people, who were trapped in their flats, as the flammable materials used for the cladding and insulation quickened the spread of the fire.

Where do we stand a year after the Grenfell Tower fire?
Fire breaks out in Lewisham tower block on Grenfell fire anniversary – video
 
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