The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Inquiry into Grenfell fire to hear bereaved speak of lost loved ones

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LONDON: People who lost family and friends in the Grenfell Tower fire, which killed 71 people in London last year, will pay tribute to their loved ones at the start of hearings at a public inquiry into the causes of the disaster.

Only a charred, gutted ruin remains of Grenfell Tower, a 24storey social housing block in a deprived pocket of the rich west London borough of Kensington and Chelsea, since it was engulfed by flames in the middle of the night of June 14, 2017.

The public inquiry faces the daunting task of establishi­ng the root causes of the fire from eye-witness accounts, videos and photos, expert evidence and the paper trail of the tower’s history since it was built in the 1970s.

But before it delves into the details of what happened, the inquiry wants to give those bereaved by the disaster an opportunit­y to pay tribute to those they lost by talking about them publicly, or by showing photos or videos if they wish.

These commemorat­ion hearings are expected to last nine days, although the schedule is uncertain as the inquiry has set no time limit for the tributes. They are expected to last between two minutes and over an hour.

The oral hearings into the circumstan­ces of the fire will start later, on June 4.

The first commemorat­ion will be of baby Logan Gomes, who was stillborn in hospital shortly after his heavily pregnant mother Andreia, who lived on the 21st floor, escaped from the fire. Andreia survived after she was put in an induced coma and treated for cyanide poisoning.

While the official death toll from the fire is 71, the inquiry will commemorat­e 72 people as it is including Maria del Pilar Burton, a resident of the tower who died in January, having never left hospital since she escaped from the fire.

 ??  ?? File photo shows workers inside the burnt out remains of the Grenfell tower.
File photo shows workers inside the burnt out remains of the Grenfell tower.

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