Resignations At Tower Fire Council

It appears that the trannie has been overwhelmed by his imagination.

He conned charities & the council out of10 grand whilst posing as a victim for nearly 2 weeks
 
Sponsored Links
I see that some bloke

Anh Nhu Nguyen has been remanded in custody as he allegedly claimed he lived at the tower block & that his wife & son had died in the fire.

He conned charities & the council out of10 grand whilst posing as a victim for nearly 2 weeks

wonder how many more bogus claims for compensation will be made ???

was he a labour voter ??? may be a party member ?? who knows ???:)

we can pretty much say he was not a Scotsman :)
 
Sponsored Links
Do not think he was from Surrey either :)

may be it was also in the daily Wail did u not see it JohnD :):)

Perhaps him did not get the Daily Wail today either ???
 
Blimey where is Noseall he gets the Daily Wail & could take a look for us :)
 
Incidentally Him , JohnD & noseall dunno if u all know it

but the bloke who owns the daily Wail may not pay Tax in the UK ;) Just thought I would mention it

It may influence your decision as to buy the daily wail in future :idea:
 
Every one is very quick to condemn the council but I wonder how well any council would deal with the situation.

If the entire staff and councillors were in obvious public view in Hi Viz jackets then there would be no one in the back office making arrangements to house the evacuaees. Booking hotel rooms and re-organising builders to get new housing finished ASAP for evacuees. I didn't notice any of the public donating mobile homes along with food and clothing. ( Some locals did offer rooms and other acommodation in their homes. )

There are many UN perceived things that have to be managed.



The people who said the cladding they sold was safe should be resigning, but after they have put large sum of their money on deposit for compensation.
to be honest the average council have many thousands off employees directly or indirectly employed
what you need is people with relevant skills and training with several others from other non connected departments perhaps highways or planning departments for example under there control and guidance fulfilling the task in hand
a high vis vest should equal a point off contact so people can approach the vest and if they dont have a direct answer they will be directed to a point off help
 
It was also reported in the independent that some residents of the fire are not seeking medical treatment because they are worried about

not having the right to be in the UK

some doctors have set up a voluntary medical assistance group in order to help them. The doctor who set this up is quoted / named

was on the same page as the article about the bogus claimant , todays edition page 4 if I recall
 
to be honest in times of tragedy unless your actions are evil "allowed status" should be overlooked in the short term with a grace period before action for things to be resolved and settle down perhaps two years after things have settled down before any thought given to status
 
with several others from other non connected departments perhaps highways
Highways officers and staff are needed to be available to design and set up diversions around the incident area.
Communications are often found to be in-adequate or not available due to equipment being damaged in the incident. Alternative communication methods may have to be installed if for example the main mast for the mobile phones and / or the council's private radio comms in the area has been put out of action by fire damage.
 
Highways officers and staff are needed to be available to design and set up diversions around the incident area.
Communications are often found to be in-adequate or not available due to equipment being damaged in the incident. Alternative communication methods may have to be installed if for example the main mast for the mobile phones and / or the council's private radio comms in the area has been put out of action by fire damage.

When I worked in the electricity industry, there was a major storm which brought down a lot of power lines, damaged buildings and roads, brought down trees and cut supplies to a lot of people. It exceeded the normal damage tenfold. By lunchtime extra engineers were at work having been called in on their rest days and from unaffected parts of the region, and portable generators had been delivered and connected to certain facilities. By teatime office workers had packed up to leave their desks, terminals and office space free for extra support staff. By nightfall, engineers from other companies in the country had filled the car parks with their vehicles and were being briefed in conference rooms prior to setting out. The control rooms and vehicles were already equipped with PMR because mobile and landlines cannot be relied on in a major event. By the second day, crews from the same company in a nearby country were at work.

And Kensington and Chelsea council bumbled to help a few hundred survivors? Not even a tea truck and portaloos. Sleeping on the floor of a church hall.

On any day you care to name, any borough might have a flood, or a fire, or a chemical works blow up, or a burst water main, or a petrol tanker crash, or a train wreck.

There might have been 600 people living in the block. The local hospital was warned to expect hundreds of casualties. They got 18. That's the saddest part of the story.
 
Other papers mention the amount and some list a breakdown of that amount.

But nowhere can I find a report by The Indy that mentions figures.
 
Sponsored Links
Back
Top