Corporate silence over Grenfell Tower fire 'inhumane'

Grenfell Tower Image copyright AFP

Companies involved in Grenfell Tower's refurbishment have been accused of trying to derail the public inquiry into last year's devastating fire.

Stephanie Barwise, representing some of the survivors, said firms were refusing to say whether changes to the building had been in breach of regulations.

She said their silence was "inhumane" and accused them of putting lives at risk by failing to participate.

But they said they would not comment in detail until seeing all the evidence.

At the hearing in central London, Ms Barwise named several sub-contractors who worked on parts of the refit, including CEP (bought and fabricated Reynobond panels), Harley (facades) and Studio E (architects), and claimed the main contractor, Rydon, was being "disingenuous" about its involvement.

"Despite their words of condolence to the victims, these corporates have no desire to assist this inquiry even though [it] could save lives in the immediate future," she said.

"The corporate silence deprives the families of the degree of resolution and understanding to which they are entitled and has only served to increase their pain and uncertainty."

In its submission, Rydon, the main contractor for the refurbishment between 2014 and 2016, said the inquiry would have to decide whether the industry generally understood whether cladding systems of the type specified at Grenfell Tower could be a significant fire risk.

It did not say whether its refurbishment had breached regulations, and instead questioned some of the expert evidence presented so far.

'Calm rage'

The company also suggested it would play little part in the first phase of the inquiry, which is looking at the immediate causes of the fire.

The inquiry into the fire in west London, which caused 72 deaths, is at the start of a fact-finding stage.

Earlier, over seven days, it heard bereaved families commemorate those who had lost their lives in moving tributes.

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Media captionGrenfell Tower was a death trap, says survivors' lawyer

Danny Friedman QC, representing some of the survivors, said the people who escaped owed their lives primarily to chance rather than risk assessment and contingency planning.

He said his clients had come to the inquiry in a "calm rage".

Kensington Council had instigated and overseen a refurbishment of the tower block "in such a way as to render it a death trap", Mr Friedman said.

The council and the Tenant Management Organisation (TMO) used public funds, paid to professionals, contractors and sub-contractors, "none of whom have yet accepted any responsibility for their part in what happened", he added.

"Residents - some of the people commemorated last fortnight, and some of the people sitting here today - told them this could happen. But they were fobbed off.

"Certainly not treated as equals; and denied access to the information that they could have used to save themselves; or to save others."

The inquiry is expected to hear from Kensington Council and the TMO on Wednesday.

'Trauma'

Of the firefighting response, he said there were instances of deep gratitude for firefighters but warned "solace" in their heroism was not a route to learning lessons.

"The response failed to realise quickly enough that this was a fire that could not be fought and required an evacuation that could not be delayed," he added.

On Monday, an expert report was submitted by Dr Barbara Lane which found that the Fire Brigade's policy to tell people to stay in their homes had "effectively failed" barely half an hour after the fire started at 01.26 BST on 14 June.

A change in policy recommending residents leave was not made until 02:47.

Mr Friedman went on to ask how these people were left so exposed to "such trauma and death".

Image copyright Getty Images

His colleague, Ms Barwise, said the fire, which started as a kitchen fire, should have remained so.

To become a disaster of this scale suggested failures at every level of design and construction of the refurbishment, she said.

"Of the six commonly recognised layers of protection against fire - namely prevention, detection, evacuation, suppression, compartmentation and the resistance of the structure to the fire - at Grenfell Tower, five of those layers failed.

"That the structure survived is testament to its original solid concrete, virtually incombustible construction."

In other developments:

Day-by-day: the inquiry so far

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