Daily Mail

THE GREAT EVACUATION

Thousands may need to move out after 600 towers across UK are revealed to have deadly panels

- By Jason Groves, Sam Greenhill and Jim Norton

THOUSANDS of people may have to be evacuated from deathtrap tower blocks after tests showed they are clad in flammable material.

Councils were braced for what could be one of Britain’s biggest peacetime evacuation­s after the tests confirmed cladding blamed for the devastatin­g Grenfell Tower blaze has been fitted to other blocks across the country.

It was also revealed last night that at least two Premier Inn hotels use the cladding.

Downing Street said 600 tower blocks in England have been fitted with cladding of some sort. Tests finally began yesterday.

In a letter to MPs last night, Communitie­s Secretary Sajid Javid said 11 tower blocks in eight local authority areas had been found to be fitted with flammable cladding. The blocks are in local authority areas including Camden, in London, Manchester and Plymouth.

But the remaining tests will take at least a week to complete, leaving tens of thousands of people living in fear.

Theresa May told MPs that councils would be expected to find alternativ­e accommodat­ion for those in death-trap blocks, adding: ‘We cannot and will not ask people to live in unsafe homes.’ She added: ‘I know many others living in tall residentia­l buildings will have concerns about their safety after what happened at Grenfell.’

But there was confusion last night after the Department for Communitie­s and Local Government (DCLG) issued advice to councils saying residents could remain in their homes while the cladding is removed, provided ‘mitigating measures’ are taken, such as banning barbecues on balconies.

Terrified residents living in affected blocks last night said they could not sleep for fear of being caught in a repeat of the deadly Grenfell blaze. In other developmen­ts:

London Mayor Sadiq Khan demanded the resignatio­n of local Tory council leader Nicholas PagetBrown, saying there was ‘no confidence at all’ in his leadership.

The PM pledged criminal action if the law had been broken, saying: ‘There will be nowhere for any guilty parties to hide.’

It emerged that Grenfell victims were treated for cyanide poisoning – believed to have come from burning insulation panels.

Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith called for ‘incredibly badly designed’ blocks to be pulled down, with residents re-homed in ‘more family-friendly housing’.

Speaking in the Commons, Mrs May repeated her admission that the initial response to the Grenfell disaster was ‘not good enough’.

But ministers were facing questions last night about why it had taken eight days to begin testing to see if other tower blocks are fitted with potentiall­y deadly cladding. Mr Khan said: ‘I have been calling for eight days now for maximum transparen­cy.

‘From the very first task force meeting I attended I said we have got to provide the reassuranc­e that people need because, not unreasonab­ly, if you live in a tower block you are worried, if you have got friends and family who live in a tower block you are worried.’

Three high-rise tower blocks in Devon have been found to be clad

‘We won’t ask them to live in unsafe homes’

in the same combustibl­e material as Grenfell Tower.

Occupants of the 16-storey Lynher, Tamar and Tavy buildings in Plymouth were told of the potential fire risk to their buildings yesterday. The council said that the towers will now be monitored around the clock by fire safety teams. Meanwhile local MP Luke Pollard said he wanted the blocks ‘re-clad urgently’.

Meanwhile it emerged yesteday that at least three victims of the Grenfell Tower inferno were treated with an antidote for cyanide poisoning after inhaling deadly fumes from the fire.

King’s College Hospital said three of the 12 patients it received were treated with the hydrogen cyanide antidote Cyanokit.

The news appeared to confirm fears that insulation boards fitted to the exterior of the 24- storey tower block emitted the highly toxic gas when set alight.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said the Government had to step in and fund safety work and evacuation­s. Mr Corbyn told MPs councils faced ‘a huge job of work, and when the Prime Minister says that those people who are in danger must be moved out of their properties – this is a massive undertakin­g and a huge focus of Government resources will have to go into it’.

Mr Corbyn said the public inquiry ordered by the Government must identify those who ‘let down (Grenfell residents) both in the immediate aftermath and so cruelly beforehand’.

The Government was unable to say how many privately owned tower blocks or office buildings may also be affected.

Last night it emerged that every tower block in Birmingham will be fitted with a sprinkler system regardless of whether the Government will pay. City council leader John Clancy said the city’s 213 blocks would get the systems at a cost of up to £31million – and would be assessed for other measures.

Mr Clancy has written to the heads of nine of Britain’s other big city councils urging them to support his calls for the Government to offer financial assistance to fireproof high-rises.

 ??  ?? Disgrace: Cladding on the Chalcots Estate, left, is the same used on
Disgrace: Cladding on the Chalcots Estate, left, is the same used on

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