logo
Bereaved father: Grenfell documentary must mark turning point in justice fight

Bereaved father: Grenfell documentary must mark turning point in justice fight

Independenta day ago

A new documentary into the Grenfell fire setting out the failings which led to the fatal blaze must mark a 'turning point' in the fight for justice, a grieving father featured in it has said.
Marcio Gomes, whose son Logan was stillborn after the 2017 disaster, said he hoped audiences might be prompted to 'start shouting' about a disaster which 'should matter to every single person'.
Grenfell: Uncovered, on Netflix from June 20, follows the final report of the inquiry into the fire which concluded each of the 72 deaths was avoidable and had been preceded by 'decades of failure' by government and the building industry to act on the dangers of flammable materials on high-rise buildings.
Bereaved and survivors were 'badly failed' through incompetence, dishonesty and greed and the west London tower block was covered in combustible products because of the 'systematic dishonesty' of firms who made and sold the cladding and insulation, inquiry chairman Sir Martin Moore-Bick said last year.
Sir Martin called out 'deliberate and sustained' manipulation of fire safety testing, misrepresentation of test data and misleading of the market.
Mr Gomes, who said he lives with the devastating consequences of the fire every day, said the documentary sets out the failures of various organisations in the years leading up to the fire.
In an interview with the PA news agency ahead of the documentary's release, he said: 'Ultimately, I'm hoping that people understand that this was no accident. This was very much avoidable, and these companies had a huge role to play in what happened.
'And I think people, especially in Britain – but this is a global thing, it's not just in the UK – need to start shouting about these companies, need to hold them to account.
'Because these companies have a duty of care but they've ignored it completely.
'And I'm hoping that this documentary is a turning point that will then bring prosecutions and justice to the families.'
A number of companies are referred to in the documentary.
The inquiry report saw cladding firm Arconic and insulation firms Kingspan and Celotex come in for particularly heavy criticism.
Arconic was found to have 'deliberately concealed from the market the true extent of the danger' of using its cladding product, particularly on high-rise buildings.
Kingspan had, from 2005 and even after the inquiry began, 'knowingly created a false market in insulation' for use on buildings over 18 metres, the report said.
Celotex then, in an attempt to break into this market created by Kingspan, 'embarked on a dishonest scheme to mislead its customers and the wider market', Sir Martin concluded.
The Cabinet Office confirmed in February that seven companies were facing possible bans – Arconic, Kingspan, former Celotex owners Saint-Gobain, fire inspectors Exova, design and build contractor Rydon, architect Studio E and subcontractor Harley Facades.
Investigations were launched by the Government in March, assessing whether any engaged in professional misconduct for the purposes of the Procurement Act 2023, potentially leading them to be debarred from public contracts.
Mr Gomes said he hoped the 100-minute documentary would see people back the bereaved and survivors' fight for justice, as it sets out how firms were 'prioritising profits ahead of people's lives'.
He said: 'Eight years on, we've had no prosecutions. And justice can't continue to wait, in my opinion, and if you live in Britain, as we do, this should matter to every single person.
'Knowing that these companies that greatly contributed to something that was avoidable, as the inquiry said, are still making record profits and still working globally is appalling, in my view.
'So seeing this and then comparing to how my life is, and comparing to how many people's lives have been destroyed, in many ways, is horrific.'
Mr Gomes said he hoped viewers might be moved to take some kind of action, from writing to their MPs to spreading the word on social media.
He said: 'I think if they can do whatever's in their power, and if that's writing a letter to the MPs about getting justice or removing the cladding (on other buildings), then that's what I'd love to see.
'It's whatever people can do – avoid their products, get the message out there. These companies need to feel some pain and that's not even close to what we've gone through.'
Bereaved and survivors gathered at the weekend to mark the eighth anniversary of the fire, which took place on June 14 2017.
Demolition work on the tower could begin in September, with the decision to remove the building met with criticism from some of the bereaved and survivors, who felt their views had not been considered.
Responding to the inquiry report last year, Arconic said it was its subsidiary, Arconic Architectural Products SAS (AAP), which had supplied the material used for cladding in the tower's refurbishment, and that it rejects 'any claim that AAP sold an unsafe product' and that it 'did not conceal information from or mislead any certification body, customer, or the public'.
Kingspan said it had 'long acknowledged the wholly unacceptable historical failings that occurred in part of our UK insulation business' but said these were 'in no way reflective of how we conduct ourselves as a group, then or now', while Celotex said it had 'reviewed and improved process controls, quality management and the approach to marketing within the Celotex business to meet industry best practice'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Daughters of murdered university lecturer urge prison service to move her killer ex-husband to Category A jail
Daughters of murdered university lecturer urge prison service to move her killer ex-husband to Category A jail

Daily Mail​

time23 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Daughters of murdered university lecturer urge prison service to move her killer ex-husband to Category A jail

The heartbroken family of murdered Claire Chick have been left horrified after finding out her estranged husband is locked up in a low-security prison - just two months after he was convicted of stabbing her outside her home. Paul Antony Butler, 53, killed the university lecturer, 48, in a frenzied attack in Plymouth in January this year following a six-month campaign of stalking when he refused to accept their relationship was over. The former doorman is now holed up at HMP Aylesbury - a Category C jail where lags can take podcasting lessons, attend book clubs and three quarters spend more than eight hours a day out of their cells. Now Ms Chick's eldest daughter Bethany Hancock-Baxter has condemned Butler's situation as an 'egregious oversight' as she shared her horror at the news. In a petition - which has now topped 17,000 signatures - she is now hoping to put pressure on the government to mandate all murder convicts be sent straight to Category A jails. She said: 'This is an egregious oversight, as placing proven dangerous murderers in less secure environments undermines the severity of their crimes and does not adequately account for public safety concerns. 'Category A prisons are high-security facilities designed to manage and monitor the most dangerous offenders, minimizing the risks to society and ensuring that justice is appropriately served. 'This change is necessary not only for public safety but also as a measure of justice for the victims and their families who have suffered unimaginable loss.' Plymouth Crown Court heard the mother-of-two's murder was the culmination of a months of harassment, stalking and violence at the hands of Butler. Ms Chick had reported him to police six times before her murder. Category C are the most lax jails with the exception of open prisons. They focus on training to help convicts develop skills to help them resettle following their release. HMP Aylesbury boasts that criminals in their cookery classes create 'restaurant quality' dishes and keep a photographic portfolio of their dinners. Pictures show polytunnels where lags do gardening, while a recent report said there are book clubs that promote 'reading for pleasure and study. 'By signing this petition, you are advocating for a safer society and a more just penal system that accurately reflects the heinous nature of murder.' Among the education facilities are bicycle repair, barbering and radio and podcasting workshops. Judge Robert Linford said the former nightclub doorman and taxi driver had carried out a 'deliberate and frenzied murderous attack'. He added: 'You did not just hurt and kill Claire you have caused untold misery to her friends and family 'The loss of Claire has left an irreplaceable void in the lives of people. You are responsible for all this suffering and you alone. 'If you are released, and I emphasise if you are released, you will be on licence for the rest of your life.' Butler, dressed in a blue and white zip-up top over a white t-shirt, wept in the dock at Plymouth Crown Court as statements were read out from her family and new partner Paul Maxwell. Addressing Butler directly, Claire's eldest daughter Ms Hancock-Baxter said: 'The anger I have for you is one I have never experienced in my life. 'Even with this anger and immense hate I have for you I couldn't bring myself to do that to anybody. 'All I can do is imagine her being petrified knowing you were going to kill her, the number 23 is all I can think. How can you do that to somebody you claim to love.' A statement from her father, Alan Butler, was also read to the court. In it he said: 'Claire was kind, caring, bubbly and larger than life. 'She'd asked for the police to help her several times. I thought wrongly that she was safe, it eats away at me that I couldn't protect her. 'She died in horrendous circumstances and I am tortured by the thought of what happened that night. 'You have murdered my daughter, taken our future, broken my heart and you will go straight to hell.' Lydia Peers, Claire's youngest daughter, said: 'Paul Butler did this to her and he has done this to our family, his selfish mind and cold-blooded hands caused all this pain we feel today and will continue to feel. 'You didn't love her in the slightest, stabbing her 23 times isn't love, that's murder. You, Paul, are a murderer. 'This is no accident, this is no mistake, you made sure she was gone and never coming back. 'How dare you do this to our family. I will miss her happiness, she was the light that lit up any room she ever went into. 'The pain I am feeling today is the worst kind of pain ever, it is an emptiness and a loss.' Mr Maxwell glared at Butler as he said: 'I loved Claire, she was beautiful, funny, kind and made the world smile whenever she was around. The loss of Claire has left an irreplicable void in my life. 'The terror from that night that somebody might harm me just as Butler harmed Claire that night is forever overwhelming in my mind. 'No punishment can undo what has been done but I urge the court to consider the devastating impact this had had on my life. 'The suffering you inflicted will not be forgotten and neither will the fight for justice, today the voice of the victim Claire Chick will not go unheard.' Taking to social media after the petition was launched, Mr Maxwell added: 'These women deserve justice. 'It's them and those family members and people close to them that live the true life sentence, whilst the perpetrators don't.' Claire met Butler when she moved in next door to him on Stangray Avenue, Plymouth, following the breakdown of her first marriage in 2021. The couple married in June 2024 but by August the relationship had already broken down and Claire told him she no longer wanted to live with him. The following month she first called the police to report his stalking. Jealous Butler continued to terrorise Claire including waiting outside her house, peering through her windows and placing a tracker in her car. On November 22 he was arrested for assaulting her by pushing her over, causing bruising. On December 31 he was arrested again for stalking her and given bail conditions not to approach her. He changed his Facebook name to 'Stangray Strangler', prompting Claire to tell her daughter: 'I wish he would just get on with it and put me out of my misery'. In a final witness statement to police, she wrote: 'I honestly feel like Butler will kill me if further action isn't taken immediately.' The court was shown CCTV and dashcam footage of the moment on January 22 when 6ft 5in Butler, wearing a camouflage coat with a hood up, grappled with Claire outside a flat she had rented to escape him before repeatedly driving a knife 10cm into her chest. Joanna Martin KC, prosecutor, told the court there was 'no chance of survivability' and Claire almost certainly died at the scene. Earlier in the day Butler had visited nursing lecturer Claire's office in breach of his bail conditions but was chased off by security. He later bought a set of kitchen knives from Sainsbury's in the city centre before walking to the Hoe area of Plymouth where Claire's flat was located. After murdering Claire, Butler dumped the jacket and knife nearby and fled, texting a friend 'I'm pretty sure I ended her. I loved her so much.' He was found the following evening by police having barricaded himself in a hotel room in Liskeard, Cornwall and taken an overdose of painkillers. In March Butler - who has previous sex assault convictions - pleaded guilty to murdering Claire and possession of a bladed article. The MOJ has been contacted for comment.

Undersea cables vulnerable to Chinese and Russian sabotage
Undersea cables vulnerable to Chinese and Russian sabotage

Daily Mail​

time29 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Undersea cables vulnerable to Chinese and Russian sabotage

This is the network of critical underseas cables at the mercy of Chinese and Russian saboteurs - and the multiple ways they could be attacked. A new report has warned Britain remains 'woefully' underprepared for the threat of strikes on its maritime infrastructure in the face of growing aggression. The China Strategic Risks Institute (CSRI) looked at 12 incidents of alleged undersea cable sabotage between January 2021 and April 2025 in Europe and Taiwan. Out of the 10 cases where a suspect vessel was identified, eight were linked to China or Russia by flag or ownership. Report author Andrew Yeh said the involvement of Chinese ships in cable breakages in Europe and Russian ships in those near Taiwan indicated 'plausible' coordination. The Institute identified the UK as a 'likely target' for future Chinese-Russian 'grey zone' operations - a term used to describe the state between peace and open war. This map produced by MailOnline shows the dizzying extent of the UK's network of cables, which are used to transmit data used for everything from online shopping to banking, personal messages and government communications. As the term 'grey zone' suggests, acts of cable sabotage are usually intended to be deniable, and usually involve ships dragging their anchors or deploying fishing nets. But more aggressive methods are available, including the use of divers or remote-operated subs to lay explosives fitted with timers. The UK is the landing point for at least 60 undersea cable systems, including nine of the 15 undersea cables that link Europe to North America. Mr Yeh wrote in his report: 'Undersea cables underpin economic security and global prosperity in the digital age, carrying 99 per cent of intercontinental data traffic. 'Undersea cables are vital for both civilian and defence infrastructure, including future AI-powered technologies. 'As a key hub in Euro-Atlantic cable infrastructure, the UK is a likely target for future Russian and Chinese grey-zone operations – posing a new and complex challenge for its maritime defence and surveillance systems.' The analyst called for the UK to be 'clear-eyed and proactive' in addressing grey-zone threats to undersea infrastructure. He called for increased surveillance over critical cables, the publication of a blacklist of suspect vessels and the stockpiling of cable parts to allow for rapid repairs following acts of sabotage. The issue of undersea cables was mentioned in the recent Strategic Defence Review. It stated: 'Undersea pipelines and data cables are critical for sustaining daily national life. The maritime domain is increasingly vulnerable.' 'The Royal Navy must be prepared to deter maritime incidents similar to the sabotage of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline and the cutting of undersea data cables in UK and international waters.' Since October 2023, at least 11 subsea cables in the Baltic have been damaged in suspected attacks. Last year, Finnish authorities took the unprecedented step of intercepting one of these ships, the Eagle S, and taking it back into its territorial waters. Eagle S is flagged in the Cook Islands but has been described by Finnish customs officials as part of Russia's shadow fleet of fuel tankers that state-run companies have used to circumnavigate sanctions. Its anchor was accused of causing damage to the Estlink-2 power cable, which takes electricity from Finland to Estonia across the Baltic Sea, after it went down just after noon on Christmas Day. Further incidents in the North Sea have seen cables running on the seabed damaged, while separately, Russian spy ships - including one called the Yantar - have been intercepted in the Channel while hovering over the communication lines. At a parliamentary committee hearing last month, MPs were warned that Britain had forgotten how important deep sea cables are to modern society. The robot will help deal with sabotage threats and clear unexploded ordnance, doing jobs that would normally put both divers and their vessels at risk. The Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL), part of the Ministry of Defence, has made the device with industry partners in an aim to save lives at sea. Experts have incorporated or developed systems so the ROV can detect unexploded ordnance and remotely place explosive charges to enable safe neutralisation. Trials for the project funded by the Royal Navy have already taken place at Horsea Island in Portsmouth, Portland Harbour in Dorset, South Wales and in Norway.

Emergency crews investigating ‘gas explosion' in home
Emergency crews investigating ‘gas explosion' in home

The Independent

time39 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Emergency crews investigating ‘gas explosion' in home

Authorities are investigating the cause of a suspected gas explosion at a home in north-east London. Six fire engines and 40 firefighters were called to the scene on Dumont Road in Stoke Newington shortly before 5am on Tuesday. Metropolitan Police and London Fire Brigade (LFB) are investigating the cause. LFB station commander Darren McTernan said: 'Motorists and pedestrians are advised to avoid the area for most of this morning while investigations into the cause of this incident are carried out. 'There are road closures in place on Stoke Newington Church Street from the junction of the A10 to Defoe Road. Residents should also note that Kersley Road is completely shut at this time.' Crews from Stoke Newington, Islington, Homerton and Holloway fire stations were called to the scene.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store