logo
Grenfell Uncovered on Netflix: First-rate journalism highlights how working class victims were left waiting for answers

Grenfell Uncovered on Netflix: First-rate journalism highlights how working class victims were left waiting for answers

Irish Times20-06-2025
There are obvious parallels between the
Grenfell Tower
tragedy in London and the
Stardust
fire in Artane,
Dublin
, in that they were preventable calamities where the families of the dead were left waiting far too long for answers. There is also the fact that, in both cases, the victims were mainly working class. That element of the story is tackled head-on in Grenfell Uncovered, Olaide Sadiq's hard-hitting documentary about the 2017 London catastrophe, which claimed 72 lives. 'We were treated as if we didn't matter. We're working class, we're poor,' says one former resident of the west London tower block in comments that carry clear echoes of the official response to the Stardust blaze.
Grenfell and its aftermath are told via eyewitness testimonies, including those of Luana Gomes, who was 12 at the time and had to be put into an induced coma after she and her family descended 21 flights of stairs in pitch-black smoke. 'We covered ourselves with the blankets my dad had put in the bathtub. I grabbed my dog. Dashed for the stairwell,' she says.
The cause of the fire was the highly flammable cladding attached to the outside of the building in a penny-pinching makeover intended to address complaints that the tower had become an eyesore in affluent Kensington. One expert likens the covering to 'sticking a petrol tanker to the outside of the building'. Safer cladding would have cost extra – but not a lot, around £40 per renovated flat.
[
Grenfell Tower, where 72 people died, 'to be demolished', families are told
Opens in new window
]
By the time of the fire, this cladding was already prohibited across much of Europe (although the situation in Ireland is not specified). But not in the UK, where Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron had led a campaign against state regulation of the private sector. 'The driving ideology was deregulation,' says one contributor. 'The state had no place telling private businesses what they should or shouldn't do.'
READ MORE
Cameron had been replaced by Theresa May by the time of Grenfell, and she was widely criticised for not visiting the tower block the morning after the fire. To her credit, she is the only prominent politician to appear in the Netflix film, and she accepts her share of culpability. 'One of the issues was the way in which authority had failed to listen to [the residents],' she says. 'I merely exacerbated that by not going to see them first off. It was important given the scale of the tragedy.'
Were it possible, some politicians come off even worse than Cameron and May. There is Eric Pickles, now 'Lord Pickles' but, at the time, secretary of state at the Department for Communities and Local Government. At the official Grenfell inquiry, he urged officials not to waste his time – before confusing the death toll from Grenfell with that of the 1989 Hillsborough disaster in Sheffield.
[
'The fire broke our family': Grenfell was, above all else, a human tragedy
Opens in new window
]
'Seventy-two residents died. 96 was the number of the victims of the Hillsborough disaster,' says housing journalist Peter Apps. 'That number should sit with everybody. If it's not important, you'll mix it up with another disaster where lots of working-class people died.'
Grenfell Uncovered is important public service journalism, and it's a shame that the film couldn't resist a cheesy stunt at the end by appearing to imply that Luana's mother had died in the fire – only for it to be revealed at the end that she survives (though her unborn son did not). That one lapse aside, however, the film is first-rate long-form reporting. It makes you wonder, if Netflix were to apply the same journalistic rigour to Ireland, what might come wriggling out from under the rocks?
Grenfell Uncovered runs on Netflix from Friday, June 20th
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chance to end the scourge of paramilitaries in Northern Ireland cannot be lost again
Chance to end the scourge of paramilitaries in Northern Ireland cannot be lost again

Irish Times

time10 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Chance to end the scourge of paramilitaries in Northern Ireland cannot be lost again

More than seven years ago, the first collective statement from loyalist paramilitaries since the 1994 ceasefire was read out on their behalf by the former Church of Ireland Archbishop Alan Harper in the Linen Hall Library in Belfast. Dubbed a Loyalist Declaration of Transformation, it received widespread media coverage and was welcomed by the then taoiseach Leo Varadkar as 'a commitment to ensure loyalist communities are at the centre of Northern Ireland's peace and political transformation'. No such support was offered by the British prime minister or the secretary of state for Northern Ireland of the day. Indeed, the British government did nothing then, or since, to build on the declaration's contents or see any value in what it might mean. Perhaps little remembered now, the declaration had come following months of close engagement with a small team of interlocutors and the paramilitary leaderships of the loyalist paramilitary groups – the UDA , the UVF and the Red Hand Commando. READ MORE Finalised and agreed over a day of intense discussion, it offered a basis for change and its intention was to make clear a new direction away from paramilitarism towards communal and social development. Ignored by the British government after it was released, to my knowledge, no British representative ever sought afterwards to meet the interlocutors about what they had done, how they had done it and where it might lead. That was, and remains, a lost opportunity. Those opportunities briefly offered by the declaration were lost in the serious tensions over Brexit and the Northern Ireland protocol and were then compounded by the havoc of the Covid pandemic , while the loyalist leaderships became distracted by internal problems. Momentum was lost. Now that an expert is to be appointed to report on the dismantling of Northern Ireland's paramilitary groups, it would be a mistake not to revisit the 2018 declaration and to talk to those who brought it about. Clearly the leaderships trusted those interlocutors. Paramilitary leaders do not make collective public statements of intent too often. They took the declaration very, very seriously, even if others did not. A large chunk of the declaration addressed ongoing criminality. However, it is understandable that many would dismiss such comments as a cynical ploy to deflect attention from behaviour that had continued unabated, or grown, since 1998. The Loyalist Declaration of Transformation was welcomed by Leo Varadkar, taoiseach at the time it was issued. Photograph:Unfortunately, the scale of criminality today and since, involving loyalist paramilitaries – everything from drugs, to controlling prostitution, to the extortion that too often happens in their own communities – gives only further credence to those doubts. Nevertheless, the best way to isolate, expose and deal with criminals is through changes that isolate them in their own communities, backed and supported by the Police Service of Northern Ireland , from its highest levels to its lowest. Certainly, the absence of such an agreement serves criminals better than if one were in play, where structures and mechanisms could help identify and charge those who wantonly impose coercion and misery on their communities. If a new declaration is to be agreed now, loyalist paramilitary leaders must work hand-in-hand with the police. However, more than that is needed. New measures to improve education within loyalist communities are urgently required, as is more investment. In addition, loyalist communities must be represented politically by their own – an outcome sadly lacking since the Belfast Agreement , even if it began with hope under David Ervine and Gary McMichael . But it is not just about loyalist leaders. Unionist political leaders of all colours, many of whom have long ignored loyalist communities, must work to make such areas more confident, to offer hope of better days. This abdication of social and political responsibility by London – even if the blame has to be shared with unionist political leaders – has contributed significantly to the deprivation, the sense of loss and the growing anxieties and expressions of anger in loyalist areas. This must change. Equally, loyalist paramilitaries, too, must begin the path of honest self-examination about their role in past bloodshed. Such a process must run in parallel to a similar course within republican communities. For both, there is still a long journey to travel. The Civic Forum that was legislated for and ran during the first couple of years after the Belfast Agreement should be reborn, but the idea of bringing communities together in such ways should not be confined to Northern Ireland. Two more should be created, one to bring communities from all parts of the island of Ireland together, and the second to look at an even more neglected relationship, the one between the island of Ireland and Britain. The three-stranded structure of the Belfast Agreement should not just be one for politicians, it should be one for the people they serve, too. In ways that can build ties, share experiences and increase understanding of the other. And it must involve loyalist communities at every turn. Everything must be conditional on paramilitary groups finally disappearing nearly 30 years after the conflict they were involved in was said to have ended. That work will not be easy. The leaderships will require support to achieve it. The difficulties should be underestimated by no one, even if most have long since lost patience with endless debate surrounding the matter. New paramilitary groups will have to be crushed decisively and swiftly. Equally, every funding pledge made by London, or, if that happens, Dublin, must be linked finally with proven changes on the ground, not just promises. There can be no repeat of the endless government grants of the past. When it comes, the report from the soon-to-be appointed expert must be hard-hitting and extensive. Tens of millions will be needed, if not more, over the years to finally eradicate the scourge of paramilitarism. The human cost and all the implications of that, in places long ignored by those in power, will be much greater if, yet again, an opportunity for change is missed and little is achieved. The chance cannot be thrown away again. Graham Spencer is Emeritus Professor of Social and Political Conflict at the University of Portsmouth.

Elders group of global leaders warns of Gaza 'genocide'
Elders group of global leaders warns of Gaza 'genocide'

RTÉ News​

time13 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Elders group of global leaders warns of Gaza 'genocide'

The Elders group of international stateswomen and statesmen for the first time have called the situation in Gaza an "unfolding genocide", saying that Israel's obstruction of aid was causing a "famine". "Today we express our shock and outrage at Israel's deliberate obstruction of the entry of life-saving humanitarian aid into Gaza," the non-governmental group of public figures, founded by former South Africa president Nelson Mandela in 2007, said in a statement after delegates visited border crossings in Egypt. "What we saw and heard underlines our personal conviction that there is not only an unfolding, human-caused famine in Gaza. There is an unfolding genocide," it added. Helen Clark, former prime minister of New Zealand, called on Israel to open the Rafah border crossing between Egypt and Gaza so aid could be delivered, after visiting the site. "Many new mothers are unable to feed themselves or their newborn babies adequately, and the health system is collapsing," she said. "All of this threatens the very survival of an entire generation." Ms Clark was joined by Mary Robinson, former president of Ireland and former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, on the visit. She said that international leaders "have the power and the legal obligation to apply measures to pressure this Israeli government to end its atrocity crimes". "A significant proportion of manifested trucks are turned away with vital supplies. The world needs to know... This has to stop." Mary Robinson and @HelenClarkNZ witness the devastating reality at the closed Rafah border with Gaza. — The Elders (@TheElders) August 12, 2025 Call for ceasefire, hostage release The delegation "saw evidence of food and medical aid denied entry, and heard witness accounts of the killing of Palestinian civilians, including children, while trying to access aid inside Gaza," said the statement. They urged Israel and Hamas to agree a ceasefire and for the immediate release of remaining Israeli hostages being held in Gaza. The London-based group also called for the "recognition of the State of Palestine", but added "this will not halt the unfolding genocide and famine in Gaza". "Transfers of arms and weapons components to Israel must be suspended immediately," it added, saying Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should be sanctioned. Israel has faced mounting criticism over the 22-month-long war with Hamas, with United Nations-backed experts warning of widespread famine unfolding in besieged Gaza. Mr Netanyahu is under mounting pressure to secure the release of the remaining hostages, as well as over his plans to expand the war, which he has vowed to do with or without the backing of Israel's allies. Hamas's 2023 attack on Israel, which triggered the war, resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. Israel's offensive has killed at least 61,499 Palestinians, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, whose toll the UN considers reliable.

U2 issue statement on Gaza: 'The band is pledged to contribute our support by donating to Medical Aid For Palestinians'
U2 issue statement on Gaza: 'The band is pledged to contribute our support by donating to Medical Aid For Palestinians'

Extra.ie​

time2 days ago

  • Extra.ie​

U2 issue statement on Gaza: 'The band is pledged to contribute our support by donating to Medical Aid For Palestinians'

'The blocking of humanitarian aid and now plans for a military takeover of Gaza City has taken the conflict into uncharted territory,' wrote the band on Instagram. 'We are not experts in the politics of the region, but we want our audience to know where we each stand.' In a post on social media yesterday, all four members of U2 issued statements explaining their stances on the devastation in Gaza. The statements were prefaced in the caption, which read, 'We are not experts in the politics of the region, but we want our audience to know where we each stand.' The band also announced that they would be donating to UK-based charity Medical Aid for Palestinians. Bono wrote the lengthiest statement, in which he admitted that he 'circled the subject' of Gaza. He said the October 7 attack 'felt like it happened while U2 were on stage at Sphere Las Vegas' and ever since, he has 'generally tried to stay out of the politics of the Middle East.' 'This was not humility, more uncertainty in the face of obvious complexity,' Bono wrote, adding that images of malnourished Palestinian children reminded him of a 1985 trip he took with his wife to a food station in Ethiopia following Live Aid. 'Another man-made famine. To witness chronic malnutrition up close would make it personal for any family, especially as it affects children. Because when the loss of non-combatant life en masse appears so calculated… especially the deaths of children, then 'evil' is not a hyperbolic adjective.' Bono went on to describe Hamas's attack on the Nova music festival as 'evil', adding that in the following months, 'Israel's revenge for the Hamas attack appeared more and more disproportionate and disinterested in the equally innocent civilian lives in Gaza.' He also acknowledged that 'Hamas are not the Palestinian people' and that 'the Government of Israel is not the nation of Israel' but condemned the government under Benjamin Netanyahu. He called the weaponisation of starvation by both Hamas and Israel a 'moral failure.' '[Palestinians are] a people who have for decades endured and continue to endure marginalisation, oppression, occupation, and the systematic stealing of the land that is rightfully theirs,' Bono wrote. 'Given our own historic experience of oppression and occupation, it's little wonder so many here in Ireland have campaigned for decades for justice for the Palestinian people.' Bono went on to reiterate his belief in Israel's 'right to exist' and a two-state solution. Other members of the band expressed similar beliefs. The Edge addressed Netanyahu directly in his statement, 'in hopes of engaging his consciousness and the sanity of the people of Israel.' 'What we are witnessing is not a distant tragedy—it is a test of our shared humanity,' the Edge wrote. He asked if the Israeli prime minister believes Israel's attacks on civilians in Gaza can happen without placing 'generational shame' upon Israel, and how 'ethnic cleansing' of Palestinians could possibly make the Israeli people safer. 'Injustice, as we learned in Ireland, is never the pass to security: it breeds resentment, it hardens hearts, and it guarantees that future generations will inherit conflict rather than peace.' He asked Netanyahu what his 'political vision' is, if not the two-state solution, and demanded a peace process be prioritised. Adam Clayton emphasised the preservation of civilian life, while Larry Mullen condemned the lack of opposition from within Israel for the 'unexpected' escalation of Israel's attacks. View this post on Instagram A post shared by U2 (@u2)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store