With their heads bowed scores of firefighters remembered Hanin Kua, 14, sister Basma, 13, mother Muna Elmufatish, 41, and little brothers Mustafa and Yehya, aged five and two who were killed when a fire swept through their home in Neasden, north west London in the early hours of yesterday.Is this normal?
Crest Academy will be opening as normal tomorrow but there will be an assembly at 9.50am for students to pay their respects.OK, sadly, that’s normal these days, when schools feel compelled to ‘do something’ despite evidence that this doesn’t help and may even make things worse.
A counselling service for girls traumatised by the tragedy will be offered at the school by a children's bereavement agency.
But this is surely not normal?
The fire is being treated as unexplained, and the Metropolitan Police and London Fire Brigade have begun an investigation, a police spokesman said.I mean, if it’s unexplained, how can you rule anything out?
Matthew Gardner, Met Police borough commander, said it was 'not being treated as suspicious'.
And as for this:
At a press conference this afternoon, he said officers would be making 'reassuring patrols' across the area in the coming days.What? Why? This is surely not normal after a house fire, even one with such a body count?
This might be a clue:
The family are believed to be Palestinian refugees who came to Britain seeking a better life.OK, now I’m beginning to see why this rather odd official response has been taken.
Oh I see, they being Palestinian puts a whole new slant on it. Obviously a Mossad special op made to look like an unfortunate accident.
ReplyDeleteI mean it isn't as if fatalities caused though fire are statistically an everyday occurrence is it?
Oh wait latest UK statistics show there were 328 fatalities due to fire in the years 09/10. In addition to the fatalities, there were 8500 non-fatal casualties in the same period.
Oh yes, this particular tragedy has conspiracy written all over it...
" Obviously a Mossad special op made to look like an unfortunate accident."
ReplyDeleteSadly, I wouldn't be too terribly surprised if this sort of rumour is what the authorities are afraid of...
Non-suspicious fires are nothing to do with the police.We may help close the road and inform relatives.Everything else is the job of the LFB.
ReplyDeleteWhat are reassurance patrols going to achieve? Tough on fires,tough on the causes of fires?
Or promotion for the senior police officer who thought of it?
Jaded
All the so-called 'Palestinians' would have a better life in their own back-yard if they stopped attacking Israel.
ReplyDelete"Sadly, I wouldn't be too terribly surprised if this sort of rumour is what the authorities are afraid of" ...
ReplyDeleteSurely not .. and in any event, should a rumour like this take hold .. God forbid, Oi vay etc etc ..
Then I feel confident that a certain Anthony Charles Lynton Blair would become immediately available to pour oil on troubled waters .. for a fee, of course ..
Post Napoleon; we were a nation of shop keepers.
ReplyDeletePost Blair; we have become a nation of memorials and bereavement specialists.
@ JP ..
ReplyDelete"Post Blair; we have become a nation of memorials and bereavement specialists" ...
Indeed .. as evidenced by the plethora of manky, mawkish roadside "shrines" .. tea-lights in jam jars & tatty teddies fastened to railings ..
"Post Blair; we have become a nation of memorials and bereavement specialists."
ReplyDeleteSpot on!
"...as evidenced by the plethora of manky, mawkish roadside "shrines" .. tea-lights in jam jars & tatty teddies fastened to railings .."
Oh, god, I loathe those! There's one near my mother's house, where a speeding moped rider misjudged a corner & ploughed into railings.
Cue much wailing from the family about the 'deathrap' corner and how there wasn't enough warning, despite the highly visible 'bend in road' signs.
Last time I went past, it was festooned with flowers. Plastic ones.
Palestinians? I thought they were desperate to have their own state?Which I think they are on the verge of doing.
ReplyDeleteWhy were they here and not in a middle Eastern country ready to go home when the time came?
How much longer are we going to have to atone for the sins of the bloody Empire?
Greencoat - sadly I doubt it.
ReplyDeleteWhich is presumably why this family came to the UK.