Angry residents stormed local authority headquarters on Friday demanding justice as the death toll from the London tower block fire reached 30, with dozens more unaccounted for. Firefighters continued the grim search for human remains in the burnt-out shell of the 24-storey Grenfell Tower, as anger grew over the use of cladding blamed for spreading the flames.Protesters stormed the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea council offices, saying they wanted answers over Wednesday's disaster. "It was a death trap and they knew it," one person shouted as demonstrators swelled outside the building, with dozens going inside."I have friends in the tower and they are not telling us anything," said Salwa Buamani, 25, who came with her three-year-old niece on her shoulders.
Earlier police announced that the number of confirmed deaths had risen from 17."We know that at least 30 people have died as a result of this fire... I do believe the number will increase," police commander Stuart Cundy told reporters in front of the charred high-rise.
Cundy said police had started a criminal investigation but there was nothing to suggest "that the fire had been started deliberately".He also said the last flames had finally been extinguished, two days after the fire broke out early Wednesday in a working-class enclave of the wealthy Kensington district.
More than 70 people are unaccounted for, according to media reports, although it was not known whether some of those were among the bodies recovered so far.Police have warned some of the victims may never be identified due to the state of the remains.
Cundy said one of the victims was a person who died in hospital. Twenty-four injured survivors are still being treated, 12 of them in critical care.Firefighters were using drones and sniffer dogs to search the building, saying some of the upper floors are still inaccessible to humans due to concerns about the stability of the structure.
The area surrounding the council-owned tower has been plastered by desperate relatives with pictures of the missing, from grandparents to young children. Large numbers of volunteers are assisting survivors.Queen Elizabeth II and her grandson Prince William visited a community centre where some of the survivors are being housed.
The government has ordered a judge-led inquiry into the disaster, which is under pressure to act quickly, as anger grows among local residents about allegations that fire safety concerns were ignored for years."Something's gone drastically wrong," Communities and Local Government Minister Sajid Javid told BBC radio.
Javid said inspections of similar buildings had been ordered, with particular attention to the modern cladding used to beautify and add insulation to ageing concrete and steel structures."We need to do whatever it takes to make people that live in those properties safe: that's either make the properties safe or find some other accommodation," Javid said, adding that survivors from the tower would be re-housed in the local area.
Prime Minister Theresa May has come under criticism for not meeting residents when she visited the site Thursday to talk with emergency workers.She met with injured survivors in hospital on Friday.The fire forced residents to flee through black smoke down the single stairwell, jump out of windows or even drop their children from the building.
One of the victims was named as Mohammed Alhajali, a 23-year-old Syrian refugee, who came to Britain in 2014 with his brother."Mohammed undertook a dangerous journey to flee war and death in Syria, only to meet it here in the UK, in his own home," the Syrian Solidarity Campaign said in a statement.
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