Uxbridge Gazette

GRENFELL RESIDENT WARNED OF ‘INFERNO’ RISK

INQUIRY HEARS ABOUT SHAH AHMED’S DAMNING DOSSIER

- By JULIA GREGORY julia.gregory@reachplc.com

A GRENFELL Tower resident who warned about an “inferno” at Grenfell after a previous fire in the tower block, handed in a damning dossier of concerns just weeks before the tragic fire.

Michael Mansfield QC told the Grenfell Inquiry on Monday, March 29 that Shah Ahmed who lived on the 18th floor was planning to take his concerns to the housing ombudsman.

Mr Mansfield highlighte­d the experience of Grenfell survivor Shah Ahmed who alerted his neighbours to the fire in 2017. Mr Ahmed lived in the tower for 25 years and flagged up badly-lit stairs on the night of the fire when he escaped.

The inquiry heard that as far back as 2010 he wrote to the tenant management organisati­on’s (TMO) boss Robert Black after a fire in the Tower.

In an email shown to the Inquiry he said he was “shocked you see defects as minor faults”. He added: “It is difficult to understand how serious a fault needs to be for you to consider it as a major fault.”

“There is high probabilit­y that in the event of another fire the whole building can become an inferno.”

Just weeks before the June 2017 fire he handed in a dossier of his many concerns to the town hall and was preparing to take a case to the housing ombudsman, said Mr Mansfield.

Adrian Williamson QC said that even after the refurbishm­ent of the 24-storey tower in the years before the tragedy, the “fire safety info was grossly deficient”.

He explained how residents did not have informatio­n on what to do in event of fire and said notices only went up after they asked about them.

He said the TMO did not provide details of what people should do if they needed to evacuate and it had not drawn up personal evacuation plans for vulnerable and disabled residents.

Danny Freeman QC said this was “surely a landmark act of discrimina­tion to disabled people”. There was no fire safety strategy for the building and “no adequate evacuation plan or emergency plan” for the building, he said.

Lawyers acting for bereaved and survivors highlighte­d “a culture of neglect” in the council.

Mr Mansfield said: “The wealthy council Royal Kensington and Chelsea created a chronic culture of neglect, of that there can be little doubt, of indifferen­ce and discrimina­tion.”

Stephanie Barwise, acting for group 1 of the bereaved, survivors and residents said their complaints were “treated with derision”, whilst the concerns highlighte­d on the Grenfell Action Blog were dismissed by the TMO’s director of assets and regenerati­on Peter Maddison “as scaremonge­ring.”

She said: “The TMO briefed councillor­s against residents making clear complaints had been rejected were without foundation and suggested residents had acted unreasonab­ly.

“This concerted effort to manage councillor­s’ perception­s of TMO came from the top .”

She said the TMO boss Robert Black cultivated a relationsh­ip with the council’s then head of housing Laura Johnson who counselled him to take a “robust” approach with the then Cabinet member for housing Cllr Rock Feilding-Mellen.

“He’s not minded to attend a public meeting with a group of people who are moaning about minor issues,” she added.

“He is fully aware of Ed Daffarn,” a resident and one of the authors of the Grenfell Action Group blog who raised a series of concerns about the Tower’s refurbishm­ent..

“You can be sure he will not be taken seriously” by cllr FeildingMe­llen, Ms Johnson wrote.

The TMO’s lawyer James Ageros however said it took complaints seriously. He said senior managers monitored the way they were dealt with and he said there were changes to the refurbishm­ent at Grenfell after hearing from residents.

“Complaints and concerns were dealt with and responded to in a timely manner,” he said. Kensington and Chelsea council said in its opening submission at the Inquiry it should have had more officers monitoring the TMO. James MaxwellSco­tt QC said: “In reflection the council considers the number of officers monitoring the TMO insufficie­nt given the number of properties involved.”

He added it should have set the TMO some fire safety performanc­e indicators and added that at the last vote before the fire, 86 per cent of residents wanted the TMO to continue managing their homes.

The Inquiry is due to hear evidence from the council from April.

The Grenfell Community Campaigner­s staged a “symbolic protest” outside the Inquiry on March 29. Because of Covid regulation­s the public are unable to attend the hearings. They said it was important to be outside because “we are so here, so fighting for justice and we will not be going anywhere until justice is achieved.”

The wealthy council Royal Kensington and Chelsea created a chronic culture of neglect. Michael Mansfield QC

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 ?? @myldn JULIA GREGORY LDRS ?? Grenfell Tower. The TMO was warned many times residents saw faults with the building
@myldn JULIA GREGORY LDRS Grenfell Tower. The TMO was warned many times residents saw faults with the building

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