HomeCultureGrenfell families urge UK government to preserve tower's walls bearing handprints

Grenfell families urge UK government to preserve tower’s walls bearing handprints

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By Catarina Demony

LONDON, Feb 26 (Reuters) - ‌Family members of those who died in London's 2017 Grenfell ​Tower fire called on Thursday for the government to preserve sections of its stairwell walls bearing handprints ⁠they believe belong to victims or survivors.

A fire ripped through the 24-storey social housing block in one of London's wealthiest areas early on June 14, 2017, killing 72 people. ​Deconstruction of the tower began in September last year and is expected to take two years.

A photograph ‌shared with Reuters shows a smoke- and fire-blackened wall in a hallway on one of the floors, bearing at least three visible handprints. An Arabic inscription reading "Allahu Akbar" ("God is greatest") ⁠was also found on a different floor. Handprints were also found ⁠in another stairwell. 

"These sections on the walls in the stairwell hold the voices of that night - and we will not let them be erased, silenced, or this tragedy be sanitised," said Karim Khalloufi, who lost his sister in the fire.

The families have filed a ‌pre-action letter to the government to try to bring a judicial review, where a ⁠judge would examine the lawfulness of a public body's decision ‌or action.

They argue that former deputy prime minister Angela ​Rayner had, in 2025, promised that parts of the tower could be preserved for a memorial if the community wanted it.

Grenfell Next of Kin, which advocates for immediate families ‌of over half of the deceased, called for the government ​to preserve these sections to allow ⁠time for discussions with the families and memorial designers.

Lawyers acting on ‌behalf of the families say the government has ⁠said it will not preserve anything above the ninth floor due to the sensitivity and loss of life. Both the handprints and the inscription were found above this level.

A ​spokesperson for MHCLG said the ‌government was committed to "ensuring what happened at the tower is remembered, with the community's voice ⁠at the heart of our work", adding ​that work to take it down was being carefully handled with those affected.

(Reporting ​by Catarina Demony; editing by Sharon Singleton)

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