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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Politics
John Siddle

Cladding crisis worsens as another block of flats burns like Grenfell

Protestors yesterday staged a demo at another tower block hit by fire and told the Government: “This must be a wake-up call.”

The sight of flames licking New Providence Wharf on Friday revived awful memories of the Grenfell Tower disaster which killed 72 in June 2017.

Wharf residents in East London held placards saying “How many fires does it take?” and “Keep us safe”.

It came as figures show around 40,000 people are still living in death-trap high rises swathed in flammable aluminium composite material.

Flames spread across three floors of the 18-storey Wharf block and 44 people needed treatment. Repairs on Grenfell-style ACM cladding were scheduled to start next week.

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Protestors gathered near the charred flats at South Quay DLR station in east London (Stan Kujawa)

Leaseholder Karryn Beaumont, 50, said: “It’s astonishing that ACM still remains on so many buildings.

"What happened on Friday must serve as a wake-up call to the Government to remove flammable cladding off all buildings as quickly as possible.”

Freeholder Ballymore said the ACM “played no part in causing or facilitating the fire”.

But its subsidiary Landor Residential was until this month one of 10 firms on a “red list” for not starting works.

There are more than 40,000 people living in 'unsafe' flats across the UK (Stan Kujawa)

Natasha Elcock, 44, who lived on the 11th floor at Grenfell, in West London, said: “It’s infuriating and horrifying that dangerous materials have yet to be removed.

"I do not want more people to go through the nightmare that Grenfell survivors and bereaved have.

The 19-storey tower block is charred from where a fire broke out on Friday (PA)

"The Government is playing Russian roulette with thousands of innocent people’s lives. It’s time to deal with this crisis once and for all, enough is enough.”

Figures show 190 towers with as many as 18,000 flats, including five student halls and 13 hotels, are not fully repaired.

Grenfell survivor Natasha Elcock (A M Sorenson)

That does not include 11,000 buildings with other cladding, or those less than 18 metres high.

Leaseholders fear huge bills if a £5billion repair fund runs short. Housing Ministry papers suggest work has started at 92% of identified towers.

A Government spokesman said: “The Government will fund every eligible application.”

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