Irish Daily Mail

Witness in tears as he recalls screams of Stardust victims as he tried to help

- By Fiona Magennis

A PATRON at the Stardust nightclub has described how he heard the screams of people trapped inside the toilets as he attempted to break the windows and told how his efforts were futile because there was ‘a steel plate’ in the way.

James Cumiskey, who was just 18 at the time, cried as he told the inquest: ‘There was nothing I could have done’.

The inquest has previously heard how steel plates were welded over the toilet windows just six weeks before the blaze. In emotional testimony, Mr Cumiskey broke down as he described seeing young people on fire as they came out of one of the exit doors.

Mr Cumiskey is one of the first of the patrons who were present at the disco in Artane on the night of

‘The whole roof was in a blaze’

the fatal blaze on February 13, 1981 to give evidence to the jury at Dublin District Coroner’s Court.

Before proceeding­s got under way yesterday, Coroner Dr Myra Cullinane explained to the jury that the inquest is now moving into a new phase to hear the evidence from those who attended the Stardust ballroom as patrons on the night of the fire.

Mr Cumiskey’s statement to gardaí at the time was also read into the record. The then-teenager said he attended the club with friends and was watching a disco dancing competitio­n in the Stardust ballroom when he smelled smoke and at first thought it was a smoke bomb.

In his statement, Mr Cumiskey said he then looked over to a shuttered-off area and saw flames coming through the shutters. He said he told a girl who was beside him and other people to ‘come on out as the place is on fire’.

He said he heard the disc jockey announce from the stage: ‘Don’t panic, don’t panic’.

He said they made their way towards exit number one and as they were leaving, a cloud of black smoke came down on top of them and people were choking and coughing from the fumes.

‘I was just outside the door when the lights went out,’ he said.

Mr Cumiskey said he then ran around to the main entrance and saw a man hanging out the window on top of the canopy shouting for help. He said the man’s face was badly cut and told how he got someone to keep him up as he helped the man out of the window and down the canopy.

He said he then saw a man outside the main door near the toilets with a hammer in his hand. Mr Cumiskey said he grabbed the hammer from the man and tried to break the glass in the window but it wouldn’t break.

‘I could hear screams inside for help. The whole roof was in a blaze at this time and the area inside was a ball of flame,’ he said.

He said he then ran around to exit number four where he saw people coming out and some of them were on fire.

As Mr Cumiskey became emotional, Dr Cullinane acknowledg­ed that giving evidence was ‘very hard’ as the witness knew many of those who lost their lives.

He confirmed to barrister Joseph O’Keefe, acting on behalf of some of the families of the deceased, that when he went around to the front of the building, he could hear people inside the building shouting for help.

‘You could hear the screams,’ Mr Cumiskey said. ‘There was nothing I could have done’.

Eileen Rock, who was a 22-yearold mother-of-one at the time of the blaze, told the inquest jury that when she first noticed the smoke it was ‘really dense’ and was ‘licking across the ceiling’ with ‘roaring red flames’.

Asked by Mark Tottenham, a member of the coroner’s legal team, if anyone was trying to take control of the situation, Ms Rock said: ‘No, it was sheer panic’.

She said as they got to the exit door the lights went out and ‘it was like a stampede’.

Ms Rock said that when they went around to the front of the building people were ‘screaming for their lives’. The witness described how ‘everybody and anybody that could help were trying their best’ to help. She said there appeared to be bars on the windows. ‘There were people kind of climbing over each other at the window, screaming,’ she said.

John Finnegan, who was a 17year-old schoolboy at the time of the fire, told the inquest that he and friends tried to gain entry to the club through a fire exit door. However, he said that when they attempted to open it from the outside they found they couldn’t because there was a chain and lock on the bars inside the door.

The inquest continues today.

‘It was like a stampede’

 ?? ?? Inferno: The burnt-out shell of the Stardust after the blaze
Inferno: The burnt-out shell of the Stardust after the blaze

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