Bereaved families and survivors of the Grenfell fire say they, and not the government, should be the ones to decide when the tower is demolished.
Demolition
The Sunday Times said ministers are set to announce the demolition of the tower amid safety concerns. Structural engineering experts have “unambiguously and unanimously” advised the tower should be “carefully taken down”.
However, survivors said they’ve had previous assurances the tower can be kept safe “for as long as it needs to be” and that it poses no risk.
The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) said a decision has yet to be taken.
Shock
Grenfell United, a group for survivors and bereaved families, said:
It is with shock that we read the Sunday Times article today, given the promise by the Government that no decision would be made on the future of the tower without full consultation with the bereaved and survivors.
The Government has engaged with fewer than 10 of the bereaved and survivors on this matter, to date, and with such a wide range of viewpoints across all affected families, we struggle to understand why this would be pushed through so quickly.
Given what we went through, safety has always been paramount and we have had previous assurances that the tower can be kept safe for as long as it needs to be, and that it poses no risk to the community around it.
Justice
Grenfell United also touched on the implications of taking down the tower:
Given the limited legislation passed since the Grenfell fire to keep people safe in their homes, the glacial process of removing flammable cladding and the daily reports of the links between the Government and the construction industry, it seems to us that removing Grenfell from the skyline while the inquiry and police investigation still continues to only serve those accused or those that haven’t acted.
Moreover, the group is asking how the tower can be demolished before the legal process concludes, adding:
Justice is important to us all and anything that may prevent justice must not be an option.
Many of the Grenfell community accept the removal of the tower will always be a case of when not if, but the timeline needs to be decided by the bereaved, survivors and community, not the Government – who have done nothing to make the changes needed to prevent it happening again.
‘Engaging closely’?
A spokesperson for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said:
We know how important and sensitive this decision is, and no decision has been taken.
Following important independent safety advice from structural engineers, we are engaging closely with the community as we consider the evidence including the safety concerns raised and what the future of the Grenfell Tower should be.
We have now published this advice to ensure those most affected have access to the information that will inform a decision on the tower, before one is reached.
In a letter, which was posted on social media in May, the MHCLG said that it will be at least a year before any decision on the future of the tower is implemented.
This will be after the fifth anniversary of the the blaze at the tower block in west London in June 2017 that claimed 72 lives, it added.