It was not expected. People were asleep in the middle of the night early Wednesday (June 14, 2017) when a 24-story apartment building fully occupied with tenants was gutted by fire. Report from BBC has it (as at press time) that thirty people are in hospital and there are fears that more may be unaccounted for after a huge fire raged through the night at a west London tower block.
It was so sad a situation with reported high fatalities where over 50 people were rushed to different neighbourhood hospitals by ambulances and more than 600 residents desperately tried to flee from the angry flames as residents around the building watched helplessly. The authorities are yet to release the actual number of people that may have lost their lives in the sad incident. But Mr. David Collins, the former Chairman, of Residents’ Association told CNN that he was not surprise because the owners of the property were warned of an impending danger, which they did not take seriously. He left the apartment two years ago.
Firefighters numbering over 200, para-medics and local helpers are still tackling the blaze at Grenfell Tower in north Kensington, where hundreds of people are thought to live. Eyewitnesses reported seeing people trapped inside their homes. The BBC’s Andy Moore said the whole 24-storey block had been alight and there were fears the building might collapse. It did not eventually collapse but every apartment in the building was consumed by the raging blaze. Eyewitnesses said they saw lights – thought to be mobile phones or torches – flashing at the top of the block of flats, and trapped residents coming to their windows.
The Met Police has set up an emergency number on 0800 0961 233 for anyone concerned about friends or family. At 06:15 BST, London Ambulance Service said 20 ambulance crews had been at the scene, 30 people had been taken to hospital, but the nature and level of their injuries was not yet clear. Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said a “major incident” had been declared.
Three hours after the fire started, police said people were continuing to be evacuated from the tower. Paul Munakr, who lives on the seventh floor, managed to escape. “As I was going down the stairs, there were firefighters, truly amazing firefighters that were actually going upstairs, to the fire, trying to get as many people out the building as possible,” he told the BBC. He said he was alerted to the fire not by fire alarms but by people on the street below, shouting “don’t jump, don’t jump”.
“Now, honestly I don’t know for certain if people jumped off the building to get away from the fire, but the main thing for me with this incident is the fact that the fire alarms didn’t go off in the building,” he said. Eyewitness Jody Martin said: “I watched one person falling out, I watched another woman holding her baby out the window…hearing screams. “I was yelling at everyone to get down and they were saying ‘We can’t leave our apartments, the smoke is too bad on the corridors.'” The BBC’s Andy Moore said: “We’ve seen debris falling from the building, we’ve heard explosions, we’ve heard the sound of glass breaking.
“The police keep pushing back their cordons, pushing back members of the public for fear the building might collapse.” London Fire Brigade assistant commissioner Dan Daly said firefighters were “working extremely hard in very difficult conditions to tackle this fire”. “This is a large and very serious incident and we have deployed numerous resources and specialist appliances.” London Ambulance Service medics specially trained in life-saving medical care in hazardous environments have also been sent to the fire. The first reports of fire in the tower, in Latimer Road, on the Lancaster West Estate, came in at 00:54 BST.
The A40 Westway was closed in both directions. London Underground said the Hammersmith and City and Circle lines have been closed between Edgware Road and Hammersmith. It is managed by the Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation (KCTMO) on behalf of the council and had undergone a two-year, £10m refurbishment that was completed last year.
The work included new exterior cladding and a communal heating system. Tim Downie, another eyewitness, told the BBC part of the building was “completely burned away”. “It has burned through to its very core,” he said. “It looks very bad, very very bad. I’ve never seen anything like this. It’s just such a big fire. “The whole building is just crumbling. It’s just billowing black smoke.” Safiyah, who is about 500m away from the building, said: “There are lots of people gathered in the street. I just see more and more flames burning and tragically I hear people crying for help. “The entire building is burning through.”