The Free Press Journal

UK may have breached human rights obligation­s over Grenfell Tower: UN

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The UK government may have failed to comply with its internatio­nal human rights obligation­s over the Grenfell Tower fire, which killed 79 people and left hundreds homeless, according to the UN.

Leilani Farha, the UN special rapporteur on the right to adequate housing, told the Guardian on Friday that she was concerned that internatio­nal human rights standards on housing safety may have been breached, and could have been a factor in the causes of the tragedy last June. Farha was concerned that residents had told her they had been excluded from decisions about housing safety issues before the fire and had not been engaged "in a meaningful way" by the authoritie­s about their views and needs in its aftermath.

A Canadian lawyer and the UN's unpaid housing investigat­or since 2014, Farha was in London this week on an informal visit to meet Grenfell survivors and local residents, at the invitation of human rights law academics and activists.

The special rapporteur said she had been struck by survivors' "feelings of not being heard, of feeling invisible, and not being treated like equal human beings".

Safety standards in the tower - from the types of cladding used on the building to electrical circuits and ease of access to the building for fire and rescue vehicles - may have breached residents' human rights to safe and secure housing, she told the Guardian, reports IANS.

The UK government was still facing increasing criticism from survivors' groups, residents and local politician­s over what they feel is an unrepresen­tative and overly rigid official inquiry, headed by the retired judge Martin Moore-Bick.

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