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Smoke billows from a fire at Grenfell Tower in west London PA Archive/PA Images
London

Grenfell Tower inquiry: 'Serious shortcomings' in response of fire service likely led to more deaths

72 people died in the fire in June 2017.

AN OFFICIAL REPORT into the Grenfell Tower tragedy has found that fewer people were likely to have died in the fire if “serious shortcomings” had not plagued the fire service’s response.

The public inquiry’s first report into the blaze, due to be published on Wednesday but seen by the PA news agency, identified “systemic” failures by the London Fire Brigade (LFB).

It also accused the brigade’s commissioner Dany Cotton of “remarkable insensitivity” after she said she would not have done anything differently on the night that fire occurred.

The report concluded that the fire, in which 72 people died in June 2017, started as the result of an electrical fault in the building.

But inquiry chairman Sir Martin Moore-Bick said fewer people may have died if key decisions had been made earlier.

He made a number of recommendations following the two-year investigation into how the disaster at the west London tower block unfolded.

In the report, Sir Martin said the “principal reason” that flames shot up the building at such speed was because the combustible aluminium composite material cladding with polyethylene cores acted as a “source of fuel”.

The panels were added in the refurbishment of the tower before to the June 2017 fire.

General Secretary of the Fire Brigades Union Matt Wrack told the BBC the ordering of the inquiry was “completely back-to-front” – a concern which has previously been voiced by the local community.

“Firefighters’ actions on the night, which were remarkable in the circumstances, are now being scrutinised,” he said. 

“Nobody is trying to avoid scrutiny, but we think that the ordering of the inquiry is completely back-to-front.”

Electrical fault

Meanwhile, the report also found that the fire started as a result of an “electrical fault in a large fridge-freezer” in a fourth-floor flat in the complex.

Sir Martin said Behailu Kebede, who had lived in the flat, bore no blame for the fire.

Survivors had previously urged the judge to make a point of formally exonerating the resident, who was offered police protection after false reports of his culpability circulated online.

The judge said he had not intended to investigate whether the building complied with regulations at this stage, but added that there was already “compelling evidence” that the external walls did not.

Instead of adequately resisting the spread of fire, they “actively promoted it”, he said.

Sir Martin also criticised the London Fire Brigade for its “stay-put” strategy when residents were told to remain in their flats by firefighters and 999 operators for nearly two hours after the blaze broke out just before 1am.

The strategy was rescinded at 2.47am.

Sir Martin said: “That decision could and should have been made between 1.30am and 1.50am and would be likely to have resulted in fewer fatalities.

I identify a number of serious shortcomings in the response of the LFB, both in the operation of the control room and on the incident ground.

“The best part of an hour was lost before Assistant Commissioner Roe revoked the ‘stay put’ advice.”

He added: “It is right to recognise that those shortcomings were for the most part systemic in nature.”

Lessons not learned

Sir Martin also described the service’s preparation and planning for a fire such as the one that occurred at Grenfell Tower as “gravely inadequate”.

He praised the heroics and bravery of individual firefighters, but described the “stay put” strategy as an “article of faith within the LFB so powerful that to depart from it was to all intents and purposes unthinkable”.

And he said those giving advice to trapped residents during 999 calls were “not aware of the danger of assuming that crews would always reach callers” – a key lesson from the Lakanal House fire in 2009, when six people died.

Grenfell Grenfelll Tower Inquiry Grenfelll Tower Inquiry

Sir Martin also took exception to Cotton’s “remarkably insensitive” evidence that she would not change anything about the response of the fire service on the night.

“The Commissioner’s evidence that she would not change anything about the response… even with the benefit of hindsight, only serves to demonstrate that the LFB is an institution at risk of not learning the lessons of the Grenfell Tower fire,” he said.

He also said that Cotton’s evidence “betrayed an unwillingness to confront the fact that by 2017 the LFB knew (even if she personally did not) that there was a more than negligible risk of a serious fire in a high rise building with a cladding system”.

Cotton announced her retirement in June.

An LFB spokeswoman said: “The inquiry’s findings are not being published until Wednesday morning and it would be inappropriate for us to comment on them until then.”

An inquiry spokeswoman said the chairman and whole team were “dismayed and disappointed” that media had “chosen to deprive those most affected by the fire – the bereaved, survivors and residents – the opportunity to read the report at their own pace and without the distraction of public discussion and commentary ahead of publication”.

She added: “The inquiry has no further comment to make at this time.”

The inquiry’s second phase is due to start in the new year.

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