Cleaners at Clifford Chance – 2013

Canary Wharf, Fri 3 May 2013

Cleaners at Clifford Chance - 2013
Cleaners get out Independent Workers’ Union of Great Britain flags at Canary Wharf station

Cleaners at Clifford Chance: Clifford Chance is now the third largest UK based law firm and one of the five members of the “Magic Circle” of leading London-based multinational law firms. Trainees there apparently now start on £56,000 and after qualification are on £150,000 a year, though hours are long. But as with many other leading businesses the cleaners there were not employed directly and the cleaning was outsourced to MITIE.

Cleaners at Clifford Chance - 2013
And march to Clifford Chance’s office tower

The cleaners complained of bullying, race, sex and disability discrimination and victimisation of trade unionists by cleaning contractor MITIE. Their trade union, the IWGB had been trying to get a meeting with MITIE for a month to discuss the dispute at Clifford Chance without success, so they decided to go there and protest.

Some manage to enter and protest in the foyer

The offices are in a tall block on the Canary Wharf estate, a private estate with its own security force, and protests were definitely not allowed there. Nor for that matter is photography, though many tourists are there taking pictures. And although I’ve taken photography students and workshops there in the past without problems (sticking to a strict no tripods rule) I have twice been stopped by security – and once actually escorted off the estate. So both I and the IWGB were a little worried about the reception we might get.

Cleaners at Clifford Chance - 2013
But leave when they are asked to do so

On Friday May 3rd 2013 I travelled with around 30 protesters to Canary Wharf station on the Jubilee Line for a surprise protest, and at the station after a short briefing they quickly got out their union flags and a couple of placards and marched rapidly to the nearby Clifford Chance offices.

Cleaners at Clifford Chance - 2013
Canada Wharf Security Officers dressed as police soon arrive

There some managed to get through the doors before the building security managed to stop them and I went with them. They were careful to cause no damage and after a few minutes when they were politely requested to leave did so, continuing the protest on the pavement outside.

Canary Wharf Estate security men soon arrived, in uniforms which seemed to me to be impersonating police officers (an offence under the Police Act 1996) and were soon followed by the Head of Security. He tried to speak to the protesters telling them they had to leave.

Cleaners at Clifford Chance - 2013
Petros Elia of IWGB and the Head of Security
Cleaners at Clifford Chance - 2013
Security officers try to move Alberto Durango

There were arguments and a few minor incidents, particularly after the security officers began to push the protesters who told them that this was an assault, and particularly when one officer hit a woman and some tried to grab the cleaners’ leader Alberto Durango.

But after this things quietened down. The protesters assured the Head of Security they would leave shortly.

There was a short period of noisy protest and then a speech in which Alberto made clear they were protesting because MITIE were treating the cleaners with disrespect and their only response to the many and lengthy complaints made by the union had been to banning union representatives and victimising union activists.

We then made our way back to the station. Despite my fears I had at no point been asked to stop taking photographs, and you can see many more of them on My London Diary.

Cleaners at Clifford Chance


FlickrFacebookMy London DiaryHull PhotosLea ValleyParis
London’s Industrial HeritageLondon Photos

All photographs on this page are copyright © Peter Marshall.
Contact me to buy prints or licence to reproduce.


Published by

Peter Marshall

Photographer, Writer, etc.

Leave a Reply