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Grenfell guerrilla gardener leaves RHS over 'toxic relationship'

Grenfell guerrilla gardener leaves RHS over 'toxic relationship'

BBC News21-05-2025
A Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) ambassador, who is known as the "Grenfell guerrilla gardener" for his community work following the 2017 tragedy, has left the role over what he describes as a "toxic relationship".Tayshan Hayden-Smith announced his departure ahead of the Chelsea Flower Show - the RHS's flagship event.He said working with the charity has "often felt at odds" with his mission.The RHS said it delivered "one of the biggest national community gardening initiatives" around the country.
Mr Hayden-Smith's community gardening began in Ladbroke Grove, west London, after the Grenfell Tower fire and he was appointed by the RHS in 2022 to help the organisation reach out to younger and disadvantaged people.He said he took up the role "well-intentioned and optimistic", hoping to "shift access" and "redistribute resource and wealth" within horticulture to more communities.He told BBC Radio London that he grew up just down the road from the Chelsea Flower Show - but said no one in his community knew about it.He highlighted the stark inequality within the borough of Kensington and Chelsea, contrasting the wealthy south, where the show is located, with the north, where residents are affected by issues like air pollution."My experience of coming into this space (RHS) was because of Grenfell where people didn't feel worthy of safe, healing beautiful space," Mr Hayden-Smith said.
The 28-year-old said he shifted his focus from a promising career in football following the Grenfell Tower fire, when he tended an unused piece of land in the local area.It later grew into the Grenfell Garden of Peace and Mr Hayden-Smith launched the Grow to Know non-profit organisation to promote gardening.He said he hoped his engagement with the RHS would help "redistribute access" to the Chelsea Flower Show - and gardening more widely - to the local community.
'Nuisance and annoyance'
On his three years working with the RHS, Mr Hayden-Smith said: "I felt devalued, underestimated, and experienced a lot of difficulty and discomfort unnecessarily when trying to present and provide solutions."I felt like a nuisance and an annoyance."He also criticised the charity for the cost of entering the Chelsea Flower Show - tickets can vary from about £60 to £140 for non-members – as well as the funding it offers to community gardening projects."That for me was an uncomfortable thing to sit with," Mr Hayden-Smith said."Chelsea Flower Show is a very much a place where there's a lot of wealth. There are gardens that cost £600,000 to £700,000 for a six day showing."
A spokesperson for the RHS said the charity has supported Mr Hayden-Smith's Grow to Know organisation in North Kensington with funds of £30,000 for a community garden."We also hosted and funded a fundraising event for the same community garden, asked local RHS members to support the project, and took part in a community engagement event with planting activities."The RHS delivers one of the biggest national community gardening initiatives, investing millions in school gardening, community outreach and grassroots projects around the whole country."The spokesperson added the RHS has partnerships to introduce wellbeing gardens at NHS facilities.
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Grieving British mother of Air India crash victim tells of her agony after being sent the WRONG body
Grieving British mother of Air India crash victim tells of her agony after being sent the WRONG body

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Grieving British mother of Air India crash victim tells of her agony after being sent the WRONG body

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The business founder married Jamie in 2022 and had taken to social media to describe their 'magical experience' in India the night before they caught the fateful flight. They even posted a short clip from the airport departure lounge just hours ahead of the journey back, which would see them sit in seats 22A and 22B, bidding farewell to the country. His mother was not aware he was on the plane, believing Fiongal to have flown back to the UK two days prior. After taking a ride on her horse, she got a phone call from Fiongal's father who told her the pair had been travelling back on the aircraft. Two days later, Ms Donaghey took a tricky trip to India from her home in the south of France, where she had moved 22 years ago. She was greeted by a British High Commission crisis management team on her arrival in Ahmedabad in Gujarat. Despite being exhausted, the mother headed straight to the nearby Civil Hospital to take a DNA test in a converted classroom. Ms Donaghey then paid a visit BJ Medical College hostel, which had been hit by the Air India plane, but was not allowed to go through the final cordon as the aircraft's tail was still lodged in a building there. 'It was like a bomb site,' she said. 'You would think it was from a war scene, but there were still these small birds twittering.' Also out there was Miten Patel who was determined to bring home his parents Ashok and Shobhana, who had been married since the 70s. The financial advisor and retired microbiologist had been in the country for a yatra, a religious visit geared towards helping people to find peace when they die. Ashok and Shobhana, pictured, had been married since the 70s and were in the country for a yatra, a religious visit geared towards helping people to find peace when they die Mr Patel was handed several of his parents' items including Ashok's shirt and Shobhana's swan necklace. After successfully retrieving the couple's remains, he later discovered 'other remains' in the casket said to contain his mother's body. He was finally able to bury her last week, describing the successful end to the process as a 'miracle'. Ms Donaghey has been going through a similar ordeal, but one that remains unresolved. After initially being informed of the 'match' on June 20, she spoke with the British High Commission and hospital representatives, as well as an Avon and Somerset Police officer, acting as a disaster victim investigator. She said: 'I was told they had found part of Fiongal but not all of him. I said I wanted to stay until they had finished looking.' But on her return to the crash site, Ms Donaghey was handed the devastating news that there was nothing left to be found in the wreckage. Things took an even more concerning turn when she was told about Shobhana's case, which had seen various remains get mixed up. On June 28, she headed back to Gatwick on an Air India flight in a bid to get Fiongal's remains to a British hospital with better preserving standards than those in India. They were handed over to Dr Fiona Wilcox, senior coroner for Inner West London, and in the meantime Ms Donaghey was given support by her sister in Cambridgeshire, as well as police family liaison officers. Six days after her return, the mother was handed the heart-wrenching news that the remains in her son's coffin were not his at all. At a meeting attended by Fiongal's father, sister and brother, family liaison officers said: 'We don't have Fiongal. We have carried out the DNA tests and we do not have Fiongal.' Amanda said: 'I had my doubts but to be told that was heartbreaking.' Despite realising that their ambition to bury Fiongal and Jamie alongside one another was now impossible, Ms Donaghey and her family have not given up on trying to locate his remains, ringing the Foreign Office each day looking for answers. Some 53 of the 242 people on the ill-fated flight were British but, as many were of Indian heritage and thus buried in the country of the crash, just 12 sets of remains were delivered back to the UK. The remaining 10 were all matches, but it is still not known for sure whether the identities of the bodies that stayed in India are correct. James Healy-Pratt, an international aviation lawyer and partner with Keystone Law, is representing 20 bereaved families and confirmed they were in contact with Sir Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister's office and Foreign Secretary David Lammy. A government spokesperson said: 'We understand that this is an extremely distressing time for the families, and our thoughts remain with them. Formal identification of bodies is a matter for the Indian authorities. 'We continue to liaise with the government of Gujarat and the government of India on behalf of the Inner West London senior coroner to support the coronial process.'

Lottery results LIVE: National Lottery Set For Life draw tonight, July 28, 2025
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time7 hours ago

  • The Sun

Lottery results LIVE: National Lottery Set For Life draw tonight, July 28, 2025

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