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Ensuring the nation does not forget this shameful episode
ANA SOUTO looks at the ideas and sentiments shaping the debate around the planned monument for the victims of the Grenfell fire
(L to R) A wall with the names of the victims of state terrorism (1974-1983) in the Remembrance Park in Buenos Aires; Grenfell Tower [(L to R) Mauricio V Genta/CC and Loz Pycock/CC]

IN THE days and weeks after the 2017 Grenfell Tower tragedy, in which 72 people lost their lives in a fire that consumed the 24-storey residential block in North Kensington, London, dozens of memorials appeared in the vicinity of the building.

People brought flowers and pictures and green ribbons. They made hearts and mosaics. They painted graffiti. They went on silent walks.

Five years on, many of these spontaneous creations are still there. They speak powerfully to the pain and loss in the community. But through lack of maintenance and ownership, or simply because they were not designed to withstand the elements and the passing of time, they are already showing signs of decay.

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