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Failings by London fire chiefs led to lives being lost in Grenfell blaze: report


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Failings by London fire chiefs led to lives being lost in Grenfell blaze: report

 

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FILE PHOTO: Flames and smoke billow as firefighters deal with a serious fire in the Grenfell Tower apartment block at Latimer Road in West London, Britain June 14, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo

 

LONDON (Reuters) - Grave failings by the London Fire Brigade in its handling of the Grenfell Tower blaze, which killed 71 people in June 2017, meant that some lives that could have been saved were lost, a public inquiry has found.

 

The disaster, Britain’s deadliest fire in a residential building since World War Two, shocked the nation and led to prolonged soul-searching about how the densely populated social housing block had been allowed to become a death trap.

 

In its first phase, the public inquiry led by retired judge Martin Moore-Bick examined in forensic detail the sequence of events at the 23-storey tower on the night of June 14, 2017, including the fire brigade’s response to the inferno.

 

In his report, Moore-Bick praised the “extraordinary courage and selfless devotion to duty” of firefighters at the scene, some of whom climbed high into the burning building to help residents escape.

 

But he decried a number of institutional failings among fire brigade chiefs, saying that training and preparations for an event such as the Grenfell fire were gravely inadequate, and that serious mistakes were made on the night.

 

In particular, he said that the commanders running the operation had stuck for far too long with the “stay put” strategy, which meant residents were advised by telephone to remain in their apartments.

 

He said there would have been fewer fatalities if the decision to change the advice had been made an hour or more earlier.

 

“The ‘stay put’ concept had become an article of faith within the LFB (London Fire Brigade) so powerful that to depart from it was to all intents and purposes unthinkable,” he wrote.

 

Other major issues, such as what went wrong in the design, maintenance and refurbishment of the tower, whether building regulations were adhered to and whether they were adequate, form part of a second phase of the inquiry that has not concluded.

 

The phase one report, which had been due to be released to the public on Wednesday but was leaked to several British media ahead of time, said that the fire had started because of an electrical fault in a refrigerator in a fourth-floor flat.

 

Flames then rapidly engulfed the entire tower, mainly because it had been covered during a refurbishment with a type of cladding made out of flammable aluminum composite material which acted as a source of fuel, Moore-Bick said.

 

A spokeswoman for the London Fire Brigade said it would be inappropriate to comment on the report before its official release on Wednesday.

 

A police investigation is ongoing but no charges will be brought until the conclusion of the public inquiry process.

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2019-10-29
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St Doreen of Bermondsy has quite rightly been slated for the scathing interview she gave Ch4 last week in which she claimed the fire brigade would have been quicker if the victims had been white. Ch4 seem to have taken the clip down but some versions survive. Unfortunately 3rd party content prevents me posting them here.

 

Edited by evadgib
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