GRENFELL
TOWER: Boris Johnson Gives Millions to Fake White Helmets in Syria,
Makes Savage Cuts to London Fire Service
Vanessa
Beeley
24
June, 2017
Not
the White Helmets. Fire fighters observe a minutes silence for the
victims of the Grenfell Tower tragedy.
Vanessa
Beeley says…
An
appalling crime was committed by a member of the UK, US, EU and Gulf
state multi-million-funded White Helmets on the 21st June 2017, one
week after the Grenfell Tower tragedy shocked London to the core. The
White Helmet operative in question was filmed climbing over the
dismembered corpses of murdered Syrian Arab Army soldiers while the
severed head of one of the soldiers was held aloft as a gruesome
trophy by the extremist fighters responsible for their deaths.
The
White Helmet operative has been “sacked” according to
the statement
released by the organisation. He has been “sacked” for
breaching the White Helmet “code of ethics”. So these days,
participating in the murder of prisoners of war, the mutilation of
their bodies and the dumping of those bodies into a waste tip is a
“sackable offence”? Dont we all feel so reassured that terrorist
acts that violate every, single Geneva convention on the treatment of
POWs and constitue supreme crimes against humanity, are a “sackable”
offence. Dont we all feel relieved that this White Helmet’s wrist
has been slapped and his T Shirt taken away from him? If we have a
single human bone in our body, no we dont!
Read
more about this latest White Helmet atrocity: White
Helmets: Severed Heads of Syrian Arab Army Soldiers Paraded as
Trophies – Endorsed by Channel 4
The Southern
Front,
the inclusive group of so called “moderate” extremists fighting
on behalf of the US coalition in the southern region of Syria have
overall on-the-ground, responsibility, for this atrocity. They
are funded, armed and equipped by the US and its allies, they are
controlled by the US-led Military Operations Centre in Amman, Jordan.
The White Helmets are funded, armed [yes armed] and equipped by the
UK/US/EU/Gulf state coalition. Both groups, working hand in hand,
side by side, have just committed another appalling terrorist act.
Who should be accountable? Primarily the US and UK governments. The
sacking of one of the perpetrators, purely because he was caught on
film is not enough by a long stretch.
Who
will tell the families of those Syrian Arab Army soldiers that the
man putting his bootprint all over the bleeding and lacerated bodies
of their sons, fathers, brothers, uncles has been “sacked”. How
will that ever appease or atone for their suffering?
Then
lets consider another aspect of this atrocity. Boris Johnson, UK
Foreign Secretary has sung the praises of the White Helmet on more
than one occasion. Johnson has funded them an estimated £ 65
million in NON-Humanitarian aid, as part of
the £1bn “secret” Conflict,
Stability and Security Fund.
Johnson and the UK government, the UK corporate media & NATO
aligned NGOs have promoted, supported, funded and iconized the White
Helmets to an unprecedented level.
Boris
Johnson as Mayor of London was responsible for forcing through severe
cuts within the London Fire Service. Cuts that have quite possibly
resulted in an increase in deaths from fire related incidents across
London since those cutbacks started to seriously affect the ability
of the Fire Service to respond and react to emergencies. Without a
doubt, and based
on the testimony of the firefighters themselves, those same
cuts, enforced by Boris Johnson, contributed directly to
the huge loss of life during the Grenfell Tower tragedy.
The
question must be
asked of Boris Johnson. How does he justify £65m expenditure on the
White Helmets, an organisation in Syria that is systematically
participating in atrocities against the Syrian people and
working alongside Al Qaeda & other terrorist organisations, while
making savage cutbacks to the Fire Service in the UK, thus reducing
their ability to save the lives of UK civilians in tragic and
horrifying circumstances such as the Grenfell Tower blaze?
Have
the lives of UK & Syrian civilians been sacrificed on the
altar of corporate geopolitical expansion and petrodollar
prostitution? It certainly looks that way..
The
following report is by Julie Hyland of WSWS:
When
the list is drawn up of those criminally responsible for the Grenfell
Tower fire in London, Boris Johnson’s name should be at the top.
The
former mayor of London (2008-2016) recently condemned what he
described as “political game-playing” over the inferno in west
London that claimed the lives of at least 79 people. Suggestions that
“this tragedy was somehow caused by fire service cuts” were
“unbelievable,” he declared.
Johnson
spoke as a video clip from 2013 became widely viewed on YouTube.
In it he is seen telling a Labour Party London Assembly member to
“get stuffed” when he accuses Johnson of lying over the scale and
consequences of cuts to the London Fire Brigade (LFB).
Now
foreign secretary, Johnson styles himself as the enfant-terrible of
the Conservative Party. His famed outbursts, however, have nothing to
do with unorthodoxy or “plain speaking.”
Alexander
Boris de Pfeffel Johnson, as he is more properly known, epitomises
the class arrogance and social privilege of Britain’s upper-middle
class. This is a man whose experience with the “lower classes”
extends only to giving orders.
If
Johnson is reacting so defensively, it is because in his capacity as
mayor he forced through massive cuts in the LFB budget despite
repeated warnings they would cost lives.
The
London fire service is the fifth largest in the world and covers a
metropolitan area of nearly 14 million people—the most populous in
the European Union. In addition to firefighting, it responds to
emergency situations, including traffic accidents and terror
incidents, of which there have been three in the capital in the last
four months.
Johnson
took a sledgehammer to this vital provision. In 2012, he brought
forward proposed cuts of £65 million, amounting to a 15 percent
reduction in the LFB’s £448 million annual budget. In words that
should be branded on his forehead, he justified this on the grounds
of “the declining number of fire deaths.”
Due
to opposition on the London Assembly, Johnson ordered the London Fire
and Emergency Planning Authority (LFEPA), which consists of 17
mayoral appointees, to begin consultations on the plan. Ninety-four
percent of those consulted opposed the cuts, but their views were
rejected as supposedly unrepresentative of the views of all
Londoners. Instead, the number of stations and engines to be lost was
reduced slightly, to 10 and 14, respectively, while the number of
fire-fighter job cuts was increased to 522.
Using
powers introduced by the Labour Party, which enable the mayor to
overrule and “direct” the authority to carry out his
instructions, Johnson decreed that the cuts should go ahead. In a
statement at the time he said he was “not minded to provide
additional funding” to the LFEPA for 2014-15.
He
was supported by then-London Fire Commissioner Ron Dobson, who had
drawn up the cuts package under the grotesquely misnamed “London
Safety Plan 5.” Only two years before, in November 2011, Dobson was
allowed to retire from his £200,000 position, aged 52, in order to
gain access to his pension entitlements, some £133,000 a year,
before being immediately reemployed in the same post.
Johnson’s
decision was challenged at the High Court by seven London
councils—Tower Hamlets, Camden, Greenwich, Hackney, Islington,
Lewisham and Southwark. They argued that it “ignores the fire risks
posed by a concentration of potential terrorist targets, tourist
attractions, social and student housing and high-rise buildings in
the affected boroughs.”
The
eighth claimant was Ms. Ingrid Richardson, who lived with her husband
on the seventh floor of a south London 15-storey tower block. She
suffered from Parkinson’s Disease and could move only with the help
of a walking frame, while her husband had Alzheimer’s disease. Her
claim was added to highlight the increased fire risks facing older
and disabled residents.
Mr.
Justice Foskett ruled that the closure decision was lawful, as the
mayor was entitled to make use of his powers. His decision made all
the more unforgivable the efforts by the Labour Party and the Fire
Brigades Union (FBU) to focus the considerable opposition amongst
residents and fire fighters on legal challenges they knew would fail.
Dobson
stated arrogantly at the time that “fire stations and fire engines
do not stop fires happening—proactive prevention work does.”
Except that there was no “proactive fire prevention” at Grenfell
Tower or many other residences. Quite the opposite.
Official
advice to “stay put” in a fire applies only to high-rise
buildings that are fitted with fire-proofed doors. But not all the
doors in Grenfell Tower were fire-proofed. Under conditions in which
external cladding that was known to be combustible had been added
across the entire exterior of the building as a cheap means of
prettifying it, Grenfell Tower was a death trap.
A
report by Insurers RSA into an August 2016 fire at the Shepherd Court
tower block, also in West London, had found that flammable material
in insulation panels “melts and ignites relatively easily,” and
can cause “extremely rapid fire spread and the release of large
volumes of toxic smoke.” The report added, “This allows
extensive and violent fire to spread, and makes firefighting almost
impossible.”
[emphasis added]
Fire
chiefs wrote to the local authorities to warn them, but no action was
taken.
On
Friday, police confirmed that preliminary tests on insulation samples
collected from Grenfell Tower “combusted soon after the tests
started.” They continued, “The initial test on the cladding tiles
also failed the safety tests.”
Yet
during the refurbishment of Grenfell Tower, when the cladding was
installed, the building was inspected 16 times between 2014 and 2016
by Kensington and Chelsea Council, which signed off on the work.
During
the horrific fire, it became clear that the LFB (and presumably many
other fire services across the country) is manned with hoses that can
reach only to the 12th floor of any building. The fire service had to
“borrow” a larger platform that could reach to 42 metres—still
only the 15th floor—from Surrey, nearly two hours way.
Like
many other high-rises in the UK, Grenfell Tower had only a single
stairwell.
As the flames spread, it would have become quickly
apparent that those in flats above the 15th floor had no means to
escape the toxic fumes given off, much less the fire, and no means of
rescue.
They
waited to die.
Residents
of North Kensington have praised the courage and commitment of the
firefighters who attended Grenfell Tower and fought to save those
inside, against almost insurmountable odds. They did so above and
beyond the call of duty, in some instances over a 19-hour shift.
In
total, some 200 fire fighters and officers attended the call-out,
with 40 fire engines. Fire fighters have told how they could not get
past the 15th floor and how they had to choose whom they should try
to save.
Why
did the fire fighters have to work such long hours under such
conditions?
Why do most accounts describe fire crews from Whitechapel
being first to enter the building—a station in east London, more
than 40 minutes drive away? What happened to the “fire prevention”
measures Johnson claimed meant the LFB could be cut?
The
answer is clear. Small wonder that firefighters and local residents
who witnessed the events broke down in tears of sorrow and fury.
Last
year, a report by Lancaster University statistician Dr. Benjamin
Taylor found that Johnson’s cuts had led to deaths. Analysing
response-time data to 24,000 house fire call-outs between 2012 and
2015, Taylor found that the average time in some areas before the
fire stations were shut was “well under five minutes,” whereas
some stations afterwards were taking up to 10 minutes to respond.
The
London’s Burning report said firefighters were unable to respond to
the six-minute target time in more than half of the fires studies. A
least eight deaths were attributable to these delays.
In
November 2015, Johnson and Dobson axed a further 13 engines in
London, just two weeks after a man had jumped to his death from a
burning housing block in Camden. The man, Choi Yip, was forced to
jump after it took fire fighters more than 13 minutes to reach the
blaze at the sheltered housing block.
The
13 fire engines had already been removed from service in preparation
to break a strike by firefighters against the attack on their
pensions, and were due to be returned. But a review ordered by
Johnson decided they were surplus to requirements. This left the LFB
with 142 engines, down by one-quarter of its strength from the end of
2013.
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