Cape Times

Final death toll for housing block inferno put at 71

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LONDON: The final death toll from the fire that destroyed the Grenfell Tower social housing block in London in June was 71, police said yesterday, after five months of painstakin­g search and recovery operations.

Police had previously said about 80 people died in the blaze, which tore through the 24-storey tower in west London in the middle of the night, but officers now believe all those who died have been recovered and identified.

The figure has come down because some people were reported missing several times; some people who lived in the tower and were feared dead were found to have been elsewhere on the night, and some people were falsely reported dead by fraudsters hoping to receive financial compensati­on.

The final toll includes 70 adults and children who died in the tower during the fire, and one baby who was stillborn shortly after the heavily pregnant mother escaped from the 21st floor, suffering severe smoke inhalation on her way down. The mother survived.

“Specialist teams working inside Grenfell Tower and the mortuary have pushed the boundaries of what was scientific­ally possible to identify people,” said Metropolit­an Police Commander Stuart Cundy, who is in charge of operations at the tower.

“I know that each member of the team has done absolutely all they can to make this possible.

“They have done that for every person who lost their life, their families and loved ones, and all those for whom Grenfell Tower was home.”

The tower was home to a tightknit, multi-ethnic community in a deprived social housing estate within the wealthy Kensington and Chelsea borough that is also home to large numbers of millionair­es.

The tragedy has prompted political debate and soul-searching about London’s stark social inequaliti­es, and whether neglect of social housing estates and the communitie­s living in them played a part in the fire.

A criminal investigat­ion is under way that could result in individual­s or organisati­ons being charged.

A separate public inquiry aims to shed light on any flaws or irregulari­ties in the design, constructi­on or maintenanc­e of the tower.

Cundy said that when he first entered Grenfell Tower after the fire, the devastatio­n was such that he feared it would not be possible to find, recover and identify all those who died.

Police officers, assisted by forensic anthropolo­gists, archaeolog­ists and specialist­s in dental science, searched every flat on every floor and every communal area.

The search involved sifting through tons of debris by hand to identify all human remains in the charred building.

In parallel, huge amounts of investigat­ive work were undertaken to identify who was in Grenfell Tower on the night of the fire, who was missing and presumed dead, enquire after those reported missing and reconcile all the informatio­n.

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? A floral tribute near Grenfell Tower, which was destroyed in a fatal fire in London in June.
PICTURE: REUTERS A floral tribute near Grenfell Tower, which was destroyed in a fatal fire in London in June.

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