Yorkshire Post

Police investigat­e Grenfell ‘stay-put’ advice

-

‘STAY-PUT’ ADVICE given to residents in Grenfell Tower will form part of the police investigat­ion into the fire, Scotland Yard said.

Detective Superinten­dent Matt Bonner said the actions of London Fire Brigade (LFB) would be examined to see if health and safety laws were broken.

Fire commanders responding to the inferno have been criticised for taking nearly two hours to order a full evacuation of the block, despite flames reaching every floor.

Both the LFB and the Fire Brigades Union defended the decision at the public inquiry into the disaster on Thursday, suggesting there had been “no obvious and safe alternativ­e strategy”.

Mr Bonner told a separate briefing: “The LFB would, as any other organisati­on involved, have an obligation to conduct their activity in a manner that doesn’t place people at risk. It doesn’t mean that at the moment they have or they haven’t, but that’s where the legislatio­n is most likely to arise if that was an eventualit­y.”

The stay-put policy was “part of our assessment of what happened and therefore falls within the investigat­ion”, Mr Bonner added. Commander Stuart Cundy said the force was “dutybound” to look at a broad range of aspects from the night, which included the emergency services’ response and preparedne­ss.

The developmen­t came as the FBU warned Sir Martin MooreBick not to allow criticism of firefighte­rs’ decision-making to be “exploited by those who created the danger”.

Martin Seaward, representi­ng the union, said the inquiry’s investigat­ion should avoid being

swayed by the “benefit of hindsight”. On the final day of opening statements at the probe, it was said both commanders and firefighte­rs faced an “impossible situation” on June 14.

A botched refurbishm­ent had turned the block into a “highly combustibl­e death trap”, which the brigade lacked training and procedures to tackle, Mr Seaward said.

The lawyer told the inquiry there was “no evidence” any firefighte­rs “were aware of the state of the building”.

He added: “Any criticisms of the emergency response should be assessed against this background and should not be exploited by those who created the danger. We ask the inquiry to maintain this sense of perspectiv­e.”

Fire safety advice within tall buildings is set by the building owners, not the fire service, meaning it accords with the design specificat­ions and escape capabiliti­es. It is feared, however, that the decision to keep the stayput advice in place until 2.47am might have cost lives. Stephen Walsh QC, for the LFB, told the inquiry: “It is a fundamenta­l misunderst­anding of the events of the fire and of fire service capability to assume the building’s stay-put policy can be changed to a simultaneo­us evacuation at the stroke of a fire incident commander at whatever time.”

Some 71 people died after the Grenfell Tower fire in June 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom