Victims of London's Grenfell Tower disaster failed by 'incompetence' and 'greed'

An inquiry into the 2017 London Grenfell Tower blaze that killed 72 people has laid blame on government, regulators and industry, with Prime Minister Keir Starmer telling relatives of the victims and survivors that "it should have never happened".

A person looks at photos of victims of the Grenfell Tower tragedy in London.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has apologised to the survivors and families of the people who died in the Grenfell Tower blaze in June 2017. Source: AAP / Tolga Akmen/EPA

A public inquiry into the devastating 2017 London Grenfell Tower blaze that killed 72 people blamed the disaster on failings by the government, construction industry and, most of all, the firms involved in fitting the exterior with flammable cladding.

The background: The fire ripped through the 23-storey social housing block in one of London's richest areas during the early hours of 14 June 2017.

It was Britain's deadliest blaze in a residential building since World War Two.

The key quote: "The simple truth is that the deaths that occurred were all avoidable." — inquiry chair Martin Moore-Bick.

He also said: "Not all of them bear the same degree of responsibility for the eventual disaster, but as our reports show, all contributed to it in one way or another, in most cases, through incompetence, but in some cases, through dishonesty and greed."
A search and rescue worker inside a scorched building.
A public inquiry into the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire, which killed 72, blamed the disaster on failures by the government, construction industry, and firms responsible for the flammable cladding. Source: AAP / Andy Rain/EPA
What else to know: The inquiry laid most responsibility for the disaster on the companies involved in the maintenance and refit of the apartment tower, as well as companies that it said had dishonestly marketed combustible cladding materials as safe.

It also criticised the then-government, the local authority of Kensington and Chelsea, the industry, regulatory groups, specific individuals and an ill-prepared fire brigade for years of inaction over fire safety in high-rise blocks.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer apologised to the relatives of victims and survivors on behalf of the British state, saying: "it should have never happened", and they had been failed for years.

What happens now: The report's recommendations include tougher fire safety rules, a national fire and rescue college, and a single independent regulator for the construction industry.


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2 min read
Published 5 September 2024 7:17am
Source: Reuters, AAP


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