Police have confirmed that many people are dead after the west London tower block caught fire in the early hours of Wednesday morning. The blaze quickly burned the building, which housed some 600 people. More than 70 people are still missing and firefighters have said they believe no one on the top floors of the building survived.
The dogs will painstakingly cover upper floors of the building. For added protection the dogs wear special boots, which protect their paws from broken glass that litter the floor of the broken building.
Commander Cundy said police had received more than 6,000 calls and that the search is set to take weeks or longer. “It's important for families that we do absolutely everything in there to find their loved ones. We have gone to the top of the tower,” he added.
Trainers insist that the dogs' keen sense of smell is more accurate than technology. They are also much lighter than humans and can cover a large area quickly, reducing the amount of time other emergency services need to spend in the building.
London Fire Commissioner Dany Cotton said,“This is a large building. There will be a large amount of building work required. Before we do that, we are going to use some specialist dog training teams that we have, that will go through the building and the surrounding area looking for any identification of people.”
As the searches of the building continue with dogs, Metropolitan Police commander Stuart Cundy said," There was a risk that, sadly, we may not be able to identify everybody." The fate of the 600 residents of Grenfell Tower was decided shortly before 12:50 am, when a fridge on the fourth floor apparently exploded into flames. At 12:54 am, the fire bridge was called, and the first engines arrived within six minutes.
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