Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Probes launched into London high-rise fire

- DANICA KIRKA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Frank Griffiths and Jennifer Peltz of The Associated Press.

LONDON — London firefighte­rs combed through a burned-out public housing tower Thursday in a grim search for missing people as police and the prime minister opened investigat­ions into the deadly inferno, with pressure building on officials to explain the disaster and assure that similar buildings around the country are safe.

At least 17 people were killed as flames raced through the 24-story Grenfell Tower early Wednesday, trapping people inside their apartments. Many people remained unaccounte­d for Thursday, and officials weren’t sure exactly how many were missing. But they expected the death toll to rise significan­tly.

London police said an investigat­ion had been launched to determine whether the blaze involved any crimes, and Prime Minister Theresa May announced a public inquiry, a type of probe that’s used to investigat­e matters of major public concern. In addition, London Mayor Sadiq Khan called for an interim report on the fire to be published this summer.

May, the Conservati­ve leader who set aside her efforts to form a new government Thursday to visit the scene of the blaze, said: “People deserve answers. The inquiry will give them that.”

An angry crowd confronted Khan as he visited the high-rise.

“How many children died? What are you going to do about it?” asked 7-yearold Kai Ramos. As the boy pressed, the Labor politician pledged to get answers.

The tower is in the North Kensington neighborho­od, a working- class, multiethni­c area next to some of the richest neighborho­ods in the U.K. Some observers asked whether hazards in the Grenfell complex, which had 120 apartments that housed as many as 600 people, were ignored because its residents are mainly poor.

A tenant group had complained for years about the risk of a fire in the building, owned by the local government in the borough of Kensington and Chelsea.

Fire-safety engineers were stunned at how rapidly the fire spread, engulfing the building in less than an hour in the middle of the night and preventing firefighte­rs from reaching many people inside. Some jumped to their deaths rather than face the flames, and witnesses reported seeing small children thrown from the tower by their families in a desperate bid to survive.

Firefighte­rs trying to race into the building were protected from the falling debris by police officers who placed riot shields over their heads.

Queen Elizabeth II praised the firefighte­rs’ bravery, and their commission­er noted the trauma they had seen. One officer was in tears after seeing someone plunge out a window, Fire Commission­er Dany Cotton told Sky News.

“We like to think of ourselves as ‘roughty, toughty’ and heroes — they are heroes — but they have feelings. People were absolutely devastated by yesterday’s events,” Cotton said.

Some parts of the tower were unsafe for firefighte­rs to enter Thursday, so the fire department worked with structural engineers to shore it up so crews could conduct thorough searches for victims, Cotton said. Specially trained dogs were being brought in to aid the search. Police were unsure whether they would even be able to identify everyone.

In addition to those killed, ambulance crews took 74 people to hospitals after the fire. Thirty were still hospitaliz­ed on Thursday, with 15 in critical condition.

One of the first victims was identified — Mohammed Alhaj Ali, a 23-year-old Syrian refugee studying in London and hoping to return to help his war-torn country.

Fears grew for others, such as Bassem Choukeir, his wife, Nadia, her mother, Sariyya, and the couple’s three daughters Mirna, Fatmeh and Zaynab. They lived on the 22nd floor, and the Lebanese Embassy has listed them as missing.

Families were also concerned about two young Italian architects who were missing. Gloria Trevisan and Marco Gottardi, both 27, lived on the 23rd floor.

“The flames are in the living room. There are flames around us,” Trevisan told her mother in a farewell phone call thanking her for all she had done, family lawyer Maria Cristina Sandrin said. Gottardi told his father in separate calls that suffocatin­g smoke in the stairs kept them inside their apartment and awaiting rescue.

Authoritie­s have refused to speculate on what could have started the blaze. But the focus has turned to renovation­s completed last year that added decorative touches to the building.

The project included installing insulated exterior cladding, double-glazed windows and a communal heating system.

“Some very hard questions have to be asked, and some very hard questions must be answered” about the cladding, building regulation­s, fire protection­s and more, Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said.

“Every single person that lives in a high-rise apartment today is going to be thinking, ‘How safe am I?’”

Britain’s government has ordered checks at towers going through similar renovation­s, and some London neighborho­od authoritie­s said Thursday they’d do extra fire-safety assessment­s at public housing high-rises.

 ?? AP/TIM IRELAND ?? People write messages Thursday on a wall at the Latymer community center in London for the victims of the Grenfell Tower fire.
AP/TIM IRELAND People write messages Thursday on a wall at the Latymer community center in London for the victims of the Grenfell Tower fire.

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