Several Dead In West London Residential Tower Fire
By Joshua Berlinger, James Griffiths and Angela Dewan
LONDON (CNN) -- A massive fire that tore through a 24-story apartment building in west London has claimed a number of lives, fire officials confirmed, as rescuers frantically worked to reach people believed still trapped.
Witnesses described people leaping from Grenfell Tower in North Kensington, and of trapped children banging on windows as the blaze took hold at around 1 a.m local time.
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A website run by the "Grenfell Action Group" said residents of the tower had expressed concerns over the safety of the building, specifically pointing to fire risks. Fire chiefs said it was too early to speculate on the cause of the blaze.
Latest developments
The fire is under control, but the the building is still smoldering.
Authorities are trying to determine how many people are still trapped.
At least 50 people have been taken to five London hospitals.
125 families live in the building, which also has a children's nursery.
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London Mayor Sadiq Khan declared the fire a "major incident." Around 200 firefighters, 40 fire trucks and 20 ambulance crews were at the scene.
London Fire Brigade Commissioner Dany Cotton there had been "a number of fatalities" but she could not confirm how many. "In my 29 years of being a firefighter, I have never seen anything of this scale," she said.
Leaping from windows
Two women who live nearby watched the fire break out said they saw people leap from the tower to save themselves.
"They literally just jumped ... (they) must have thought, we're not going to sit here and suffocate," Samira Awil said, adding she had seen bodies of "kids, women, men" covered in sheets outside the building.
Tamara Eastmond said a lot of people appeared to be unaccounted for. "We literally watched a man burn to death in his flat," she told CNN. "We saw the flames enter his flat and (overcome) him."
Some witnesses told CNN residents were at first told to stay inside the building when the blaze broke out.
One woman said her friend inside for three hours and was told by police to wait and put towels down to block the doors. When no-one came to help, she decided to escape on her own, the woman said.
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Another witness said a family friend was "stuck on the eighth floor with her 5-year-old daughter" until 5 a.m., almost four hours after the fire broke out.
Tia Abrahams, who lives close to the scene, got there before the fire service.
"There were people banging on windows screaming, crying out for help. There were even young children banging on the windows," she told CNN, adding she could hear screams as the hours went by.
Other witnesses said they saw residents holding their children out of windows.
Michael Paramasivan said he was watching TV in the building as his girlfriend and daughter slept when he smelled burning plastic. Soon he saw the smoke and chaos.
"I grabbed my little girl and ran down the stairs," he said. "Half of the building was ablaze by the time we got out. And it was just spreading like wildfire."
Grenfell Tower
Grenfell Tower is part of the sprawling Lancaster West Estate, an enclave of social housing managed by a private agency on behalf of the London Borough of Kensignton and Chelsea. While the borough is one of the most affluent in London, North Kensington is a particularly deprived district.
The tower was built in the 1970s and recently subject to a $10.9 million redevelopment, according to property firm Rydon. The building was to undergo specific improvements to fire safety and ventilation works. The web page detailing the refurbishment was unavailable for a time on Wednesday.
A boxing gym and a nursery are housed in the tower, according to a news release last year from the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. Before the renovation there were 120 apartments in the building.
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Local councilor Robert Atkinson told CNN that the renovation works had modernized the building. "The building needed to be brought up to date with new kitchens and new heating systems," he said, adding that safety certificates had been issued and the council had been "told it had all been brought up to date."
Cladding had been added to the outside of the building, blamed by some residents for helping the fire to spread so quickly.
Investigation in 'early stages'
The blaze appears to be the worst in London since a 2009 fire in the city's south killed six people, including three children.
It was not yet possible to confirm the cause of the fire, which spread throughout the building from lower floors, Fire brigade chief Cotton said.
She said the first fire trucks were on the scene within six minutes. "Crews wearing breathing apparatus ... have been working in extremely challenging conditions," she said.
Khan, the mayor, said that safety concerns and questions raised by the tenants will "need to be answered". He told the BBC that a situation where "people's safety is put at risk by bad advice or poor maintenance" could not be tolerated.
Asked about reports that residents had been told to stay in their apartments in the event of fire, he said: "Thankfully residents didn't stay in their flats and fled to safety."
Khan who described the incident as "distressing", also praised the quick response from the emergency services.
"We declared a major incident very early, which meant not just the fire service but also the London Ambulance Service, the police and the others were involved at the scene", Khan said.
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