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07th May 2021

Residents of flats with ‘Grenfell cladding’ have ‘campaigned for its removal for three years’ before fire

Charlie Herbert

A fire broke out at the New Providence Wharf tower block on Friday

Residents of a tower block in London that set alight had been trying for three years to get the dangerous cladding from the building removed. It is thought that the cladding is similar to that used on Grenfell Tower.

Around 125 firefighter and 20 fire engines were rushed to the New Providence Wharf block, near Canary Wharf, on Friday morning, as part of the building went up in flames. The eighth, ninth and 10th floors of the building were ablaze.

Resident have been left in dismay though as they have been campaigning for the cladding, which is reportedly the same as that used on Grenfell Tower, which went up in flames in 2017, killing 72 people.

One former resident wrote on Twitter: “I lived in New Providence Wharf development for 4 years until last month – thinking of all the residents who have been campaigning to remove this dangerous cladding for years and hoping everyone is safe.”

Meanwhile another revealed that he had written a piece raising concern over the cladding years ago.

Grenfell United, the organisation set up by survivors and victim’s families following the tragedy, have also commented on the fire. They said that the government had “completely failed” its target to remove all dangerous cladding from buildings by June 2020.

The fire at New Providence Wharf fire has now been extinguished, though the flat where it started appears to have been destroyed. The London Ambulance service said numerous people had been treated at the scene, though the extent of their injuries is yet to be revealed.

A spokesperson for the service said: “We have responded alongside the London Fire Brigade to a fire in a residential building in Poplar.

“We dispatched ambulance crews, clinical team managers, incident response officers, a command support vehicle, Emergency Planning and Resilience officers and Hazardous Area Response Teams to the scene.

“They’ve treated a number of people, and remain at the scene, working with other emergency services.”