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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Barney Davis

Shepherds Bush flats blaze was ignited by charging e-bike, says resident

A resident of a high-rise block of flats has said a blaze that forced dozens of people to evacuate began after an e-bike being charged in his home caught fire.

Liiban Shakat described thinking he was "going to die" after his friend, whom he named as Abid Naser Mohamed, woke him up and led him to the guest bedroom, which was engulfed in flames.

Mr Mohamed was taken to hospital suffering from smoke inhalation after emergency services including 60 firefighters and two ambulances went to the scene in Shepherds Bush shortly after 9am on Tuesday, Mr Shakat said.

Mr Shakat told how his friend, who had been staying with him for several days, had started charging an e-bike battery in the flat when it began smoking in the socket.

Liiban Shakat, resident of the flat where a fire broke out on the 12th floor in Stebbing House (Victoria Jones/PA) (PA Wire)

When it was unplugged it sparked and the surroundings were set alight, Mr Shakat added.

The scorched windows of Mr Shakat's home at the Stebbing House flats, less than a mile from Grenfell Tower, where a fire claimed 72 lives in 2017, could clearly be seen.

Speaking to reporters outside the building and still wearing his macawis - a traditional Somali style of pyjamas - he said: "(My friend) was in the room that caught on fire. He was in the bed. His mouth was black because he inhaled so much smoke."

60 firefighters tackled the blaze in a 12th floor flat in W11 close to Grenfell Tower (BBC London)

The 38-year-old was half-awake when he was confronted with the blaze, and rushed to pour a bucket of water over the burning debris.

But this ended up exacerbating the fire, and he ran to try and escape the building and alert his neighbours by knocking on nearby doors on the 12th floor.

At least 30 residents fled the building as plumes of black smoke were seen billowing out of windows.

"Something was coming from the bike, smoke, so he unplugged it. Now the debris, the plastic, the fire caught the whole place, the windows the bed," Mr Shakat, who had lived in the building for 20 years, said through a translator.

He claimed that no fire alarm had sounded and no water sprinklers had been activated, despite the size of the fire.

But Jonathan Stone, a safety manager at the Hammersmith and Fulham Council, which owns and runs the building, said precautionary measures taken by the local authorities had "prevented another Grenfell".

Both Mr Stone and the Labour council's leader Stephen Cowan, who were at the scene after the fire, told PA they had been advised that the fire alarms had gone off as expected.

The council has a system called Fire Safety Plus which has taken steps including installing fire safety doors to help residents stay protected.

The fire was brought under control by around 10.55am, which Mr Cowan said was partly made possible by the lack of flammable cladding - a crucial difference from the Grenfell Tower.

He told PA residents may understandably be "in shock" after the ordeal and that reports of fire alarms failing to sound were understood to be inaccurate.

Labour MP for Hammersmith Andy Slaughter told PA at the scene that work he understood the fire would be "of great concern" and said a full report would be completed to formally establish the cause.

"Any fire, particularly in high rise buildings, is going to be of great concern to residents and they will need reassurance that all safety measures are in place," he said.

Mr Shakat recalled watching the Grenfell Tower blaze from the same flat that caught fire on Tuesday, saying the blaze brought memories of the tragedy back.

He said: "I remember seeing it. We were playing Playstation."

He added: "I thought I was going to die today."

Detailing how the events of the morning unfolded, he said: "He (Mr Mohamed) forces me to wake up. I follow him. I went into the room and the whole room is on fire. I ran to the sink, I got a bucket of water and I tried to discourage the fire and then it got worse.

"I was in shock," he said. "I didn't know what to do."

London Ambulance Service said two ambulances and a Hazardous Area Response Team attended, with one person taken to hospital and two assessed at the scene.

In a statement from the scene, station commander David Bracewell said: "Firefighters dealt with a fire on the 12th floor of a tower block in W11. Three people from the affected flat left before the brigade arrived. A number of other residents evacuated the building.

"Firefighters led six residents to safety via an internal staircase. Further residents who were not affected by fire, heat or smoke were advised to remain in their flats.

"In the early stages we used new technology called 9Eye that enabled a caller to send live stream videos of the incident straight into the brigade's 999 call centre.

"We've also used a 32m turntable ladder to put water on the outside of the building."

Kensington and Chelsea council leader Elizabeth Campbell said the incident may have brought back "awful memories" of the Grenfell tragedy.

She said: "We are also acutely aware of the awful memories and trauma these events can bring back to the community, and we have asked colleagues in the NHS and CNWL to ensure that support is clearly signposted."

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