Irish Daily Mail

Please hurry up... I’m begging you

999 operator tells of final call from girl, 12, in Grenfell Tower

- By Vanessa Allen

A 999 OPERATOR told yesterday of the harrowing hour she spent trying to reassure a girl of 12 trapped on the top floor of Grenfell Tower as fire raged through the building.

Fire brigade operator Sarah Russell said she felt ‘completely helpless’ as Jessica Urbano Ramirez told of her terror and begged firemen to ‘hurry up’.

‘When people are pleading with you, saying [they] do not want to die and I cannot physically do anything to help them, it is very hard,’ she told the public inquiry into the tragedy.

Jessica was among the 72 residents who lost their lives as a result of the fire in the 24-storey block of flats in west London on June 14 last year.

She begged others trapped inside the top floor flat with her, ‘Don’t leave me’, and told the 999 call operator the flat had filled with smoke and that she was too frightened to look around.

Jessica and six others who took refuge in the flat, including a 12-year-old boy Biruk and his mother Berkti Haftom, all died in the disaster.

Firemen searched her family’s flat on the 20th floor and found it empty, not realising the terrified girl had climbed up three floors to escape the fire.

Excerpts from her final, panic-stricken 999 call were read to inquiry. She described seeing smoke coming up through the floor and told the operator: ‘There’s nowhere we can go... Can you hurry up please? I’m begging you.’

The flames spread with ferocious speed through flammable cladding panels on the tower block’s exterior, leaping 19 floors in 12 minutes.

Operator Ms Russell said her advice to Jessica that help was on its way was based on her training and previous experience of ‘what should happen’ in a tower block fire – when residents are normally told to ‘stay put’ and wait for rescue.

She described hearing Jessica’s breathing ‘getting a bit heavy’ and others around her coughing as they huddled together on a bedroom under smoke. a Jessica thick floor layer to passed try of choking to on stay her advice them to those to close around windows, her, telling get low on the floor and put fabric over their mouths.

But towards the end of the call she exclaimed: ‘There’s a fire in here! Oh my God! I can’t breathe. I can’t breathe no more.’ Ms Russell continued to ask questions and offer reassuranc­e but said she could only hear ‘rasping sounds, then nothing’. She said that after the line went quiet, she hung on, reluctant to end the call. Ms Russell said not long after the call ended, she became aware that the advice to Grenfell Tower residents had been changed from ‘stay-put’ to try to get out. Jessica was alone in her family’s 20th floor flat when the fire started as her mother was working and her father was at a friend’s flat on a lower floor.

Her family searched for her for weeks before police confirmed that her remains had been found on the top floor.

The inquiry in central London, led by former Appeal Court judge Martin Moore-Bick, continues.

‘There’s nowhere we can go’

 ??  ?? Trapped: Jessica Urbano Ramirez, 12, died in blaze
Trapped: Jessica Urbano Ramirez, 12, died in blaze

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