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Memorials held five years on from London fire tragedy

The names of the 72 people who perished in Britain's worst residential fire since World War II were read out on Tuesday at a church service marking the fifth anniversary of the blaze.

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Memorials held five years on from London fire tragedy

The FBU has also highlighted "multiple failings" in the testing and approval of cladding, insulation and other material used in the Grenfell Tower.

It claimed the tragedy could have been averted had the building's regulator not been privatised and been "dependent on fee income" from manufacturers.

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Memorials held five years on from London fire tragedy

FAILINGS

Grenfell campaigners say the fire and its aftermath has exposed gaping social inequality.

They argue changes would have been implemented sooner had low-income workers and ethnic minority families in social housing not been the ones affected.

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Memorials held five years on from London fire tragedy

There has also been a wider outcry among homeowners who have been forced to pay for the removal of unsafe cladding in the high-rises where they live.

Many have been unable to sell their properties or get proper insurance.

The Times newspaper reported that some 640,000 people were still living in buildings with the same type of cladding material.

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Memorials held five years on from London fire tragedy

Government ministers have also been condemned for advising as late as last month that residents should wait for help before evacuating during a high-rise fire.

"A lot of people who managed to survive were people who managed to get out early because they ignored the 'stay put' advice," said Tiago Alves, 25, who escaped with his mother, father and younger sister.

"I'm gobsmacked at the fact that we're still having this conversation five years on."

London Mayor Sadiq Khan, from the main opposition Labour party, praised survivors for their campaign to improve public safety.

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Memorials held five years on from London fire tragedy

The ongoing public inquiry was "painstakingly unearthing the truth" -- that profits were prioritised over public safety and deregulation weakened building standards, he said.

"The response from the government, building developers and owners has fallen far short of what the families of the victims and survivors have every right to expect," he wrote in The Observer on Sunday.

"We still have too many residents in London and across the country living in high-rise buildings that are covered in dangerous flammable cladding, and we are still seeing designs for buildings that have critical safety failings."