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27 high-rises in UK fail fire safety tests

Cladding on 27 towers in 15 local authority areas has failed tests prompted by Grenfell Tower blaze |

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Thousands of residents from 650 London flats were evacuated yesterday due to fire safety fears in the wake of the Grenfell Tower tragedy, but dozens refused to leave their homes, according to local officials.

Four of the five Chalcots Estate towers in Camden, north London, were deemed unsafe after they were found to use cladding similar to that on Grenfell, widely blamed for the rapid spread of the massive blaze last week that is presumed to have killed 79 people.

Some 27 high-rise buildings in 15 local authoritie­s have already failed urgent fire tests conducted after Grenfell, the government announced yesterday, raising fears that thousands more may need to be evacuated.

Around 4,000 residents from all five Chalcots towers were initially evacuated, but one of the five — Blashford — was deemed safe and residents allowed to return.

Other residents faced chaos, with temporary accommodat­ion offered in a local leisure centre and hotels, but some refused to move.

Camden Council leader Georgia Gould told BBC News that 83 residents had refused to leave, adding the situation “will become a matter for the fire service”.

Resident Renee Williams, 90, said she and her neighbours had been given no warning.

“No official came and told us what’s going on, I saw it on the TV so I packed an overnight bag,” she told the Press Associatio­n.

“But now they’re telling us we’re going to be out of our homes for the next two to four weeks. There’s no organisati­on and it’s chaos.”

Council leader Gould acknowledg­ed it was “a scary time” but vowed “to make sure that they stay safe.

“The cost we can deal with later,” she added.

The council has been booking hotels across London and the works are expected to take up to four weeks.

Michelle Urquhart, who has been living in the Chalcots Estate’s Bray tower, said the situation was “frightenin­g”.

“I don’t know where we are going to go.

“One man in a suit said to me ‘you can’t stay here tonight’.”

In an update early yesterday, Camden Council said they had secured “hundreds of hotel beds for Chalcots’ residents.”

Prime Minister Theresa May said yesterday that the government would do “what is necessary” to ensure people would have somewhere to stay.

Around 600 tower blocks are enclosed in potentiall­y deadly cladding, with councils in Manchester, Portsmouth and London all announcing they were to immediatel­y remove cladding from 13 structures.

On Friday, police said that manslaught­er charges could be brought over the Grenfell inferno, after finding that the fire started with a faulty fridge and the building’s cladding had failed safety tests.

Fiona McCormack from the London police said that tiles and insulation on the outside of the building “don’t pass any safety tests.”

Investigat­ion

McCormack said police were investigat­ing companies involved in the building and refurbishm­ent of the tower, and possible “health and safety and fire safety offences”.

The cladding was installed on the 24-storey council-owned Grenfell Tower, which was built in 1974, as part of a refurbishm­ent completed last year.

It has prompted a wider review of social housing which has identified at least 600 towers in England with similar cladding.

McCormack said all “complete bodies” had been removed from the burnt-out tower and there was “a terrible reality that we may not find or identify everyone who died due to the intense heat”.

She said officers had been through all levels of the tower but that the full forensic search could take until the end of the year.

Police fear the toll may be higher because some residents may have been living in the tower illegally.

Prime Minister May stressed on Thursday that all Grenfell victims, regardless of their immigratio­n status, would be able to access whatever help they need.

May said her thoughts were with the evacuated Chalcots residents. “We will work with and support the emergency services and relevant authoritie­s to safeguard the public,” she said.

Six men and three women killed in the Grenfell inferno have been formally identified.

They are Mohammad Alhajali, 23; Khadija Saye, 24; Abufars Ebrahim, 39; Khadija Khalloufi, 52; and Anthony Disson, 65, while the identities of three men and one woman have not been made public at the request of their families. Nine patients remain in hospital, of which three are in a critical condition.

Meanwhile the government ordered immediate checks on the Hotpoint FF175BP fridge freezer model blamed for the blaze.

 ?? AP ?? Above: Residents are evacuated from the Taplow residentia­l tower block on the Chalcots Estate, in the borough of Camden, north London, Friday. A local London council has decided to evacuate some 800 households in apartment buildings it owns because of...
AP Above: Residents are evacuated from the Taplow residentia­l tower block on the Chalcots Estate, in the borough of Camden, north London, Friday. A local London council has decided to evacuate some 800 households in apartment buildings it owns because of...
 ?? Reuters ?? Left: A resident is evacuated from the Burnham Tower residentia­l block as a precaution­ary measure following concerns over the type of cladding used on the outside of the building.
Reuters Left: A resident is evacuated from the Burnham Tower residentia­l block as a precaution­ary measure following concerns over the type of cladding used on the outside of the building.

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