The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Firefighte­rs begin grim search for bodies

Death toll expected to rise as questions arise over whether recent refurbishm­ent had contribute­d to the fire

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LONDON: Firefighte­rs searched for bodies yesterday in a London tower block gutted by a blaze that has already left 17 dead, as questions grew over whether a refurbishm­ent had contribute­d to the disaster.

The death toll was expected to rise further as crews picked their way through the blackened skeleton of the 24-storey Grenfell Tower, home to around 600 people and the scene of horror on Tuesday night. Fire Commission­er Dany Cotton said parts of the building remained unsafe and it would take a long time to complete a detailed search of every floor.

She told Sky News there were still ‘unknown numbers’ of people inside, but ‘it will be an absolute miracle for anyone to be left alive’.

“It will take weeks before this building is cleared and truly searched properly,” she said.

Whole families remain missing after the fire swept up the local authority building, forcing residents to flee through black smoke down the single stairwell, jump out a window or even drop their children to safety.

Questions are growing about how the flames spread so quickly, engulfing its 120 apartments in what fire chiefs said was an unpreceden­ted blaze. The focus centres on the cladding fitted to external walls on the 1970s concrete block, as part of a £8.7million (US$11 million, 9.9 million euros) refit completed only last year.

According to the BBC, the cladding had a plastic core, and was similar to that used by high-rise buildings in France, the United Arab Emirates and Australia which had also suffered fires that spread.

Rydon, the firm responsibl­e for the refit, said the project ‘met all required building regulation­s’.

Harley Facades, which fitted the panels, told the BBC: “At this

It will take weeks before this building is cleared and truly searched properly. Dany Cotton, Fire Commission­er

time, we are not aware of any link between the fire and the exterior cladding to the tower.”

Prime Minister Theresa May said there would be an investigat­ion into the cause of the ‘appalling tragedy’, once the last bodies had been recovered.

Grenfell Tower looms over a social housing estate in north Kensington, just streets away from some of the most expensive homes in the world in Notting Hill. The area has a large immigrant population, but many families have lived in the area for years, passing their low-rent homes onto their children.

Eyewitness­es told how residents in the upper floors shone their mobile phone torches to attract attention, before they disappeare­d from the windows, their screams of help falling silent.

“We saw them dying,” said Adi Estu, 32, who was evacuated from her home nearby. Some desperate people reportedly jumped from the windows, while one woman, Samira Lamrani, said she saw a woman drop a baby from the ninth or 10th floor, for the child to be caught by a man below.

The fire triggered a wave of mourning in a country already battered by a string of terror attacks. More than £480,000 had been raised online for the victims by yesterday morning, while local community centres were inundated by donations of clothes and food.

Volunteers in the city of Glasgow – 550 kilometres away – sent a truck laden with nappies and other supplies. Cladding has been added to a number of buildings across London in recent years, intended to provide insulation as well as improve the appearance of older buildings. But Kostas Tsavdaridi­s, associate professor of Structural Engineerin­g at the University of Leeds warned: “Some materials used in facades act as significan­t fire loads.

“Although theoretica­lly they are fire resistant, in most cases they are high-temperatur­e resistant instead of fire resistant. But even if they are, smoke and fire will spread through the joints and connection­s.”

There were questions about why there was no sprinkler system in the Grenfell Tower which could have helped stop the fire spreading, or any central smoke alarm system that would have woken sleeping residents.

Official fire service advice for residents to stay in their homes and use towels to block out smoke, while awaiting help, has also come under scrutiny. Firefighte­rs were only able to reach the tower’s 12th floor of the block at the height of the blaze.

Abdelaziz El-Wahabi, his wife Faouzia and their three children were among those who followed to protocol in their flat on the 21st floor. “Last time I spoke to his wife, he was on the phone to the fire brigade. I’ve not heard from them since,” his sister Hanan Wahabi told AFP on Wednesday morning.

David Collins, former chairman of the Grenfell Tower Residents’ Associatio­n, said the building’s management had failed to listen to residents’ calls for improvemen­ts on fire safety.

“If the same concerns were had in a wealthy part of Kensington and Chelsea they would have got resolved, but here they didn’t get resolved,” Collins told AFP.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Damage is seen to a tower block which was destroyed in a fire disaster in north Kensington, West London, Britain.
— Reuters photo Damage is seen to a tower block which was destroyed in a fire disaster in north Kensington, West London, Britain.
 ?? — Reuters photo ?? May visits the scene of a tower block which was destroyed in the fire.
— Reuters photo May visits the scene of a tower block which was destroyed in the fire.
 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A man reads messages of condolence on a wall near a tower block severely damaged by the fire.
— Reuters photo A man reads messages of condolence on a wall near a tower block severely damaged by the fire.

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