Four weeks after a devastating fire ripped through Grenfell Tower in west London, mourners lit candles in an area filled with pictures, flowers and hand-written notes of remembrance.
"I know people who have been lost, I know people who have lost people, I know people who are besides themselves with grief. It is really, really difficult," local MP Emma Dent Coad said.
A minute's silence was held during which many wept, after which people attending the vigil sang Bob Marley's "One Love".
"Four weeks ago a terrible tragedy unfolded within Grenfell Tower. The human cost of that tragedy is something we are all still trying to fully comprehend," police commander Stuart Cundy said in a statement yesterday.
The Metropolitan Police's disaster victim identification coordinator, Alistair Hutchins, told the BBC that Grenfell Tower was the worst incident he has dealt with in his 18-year career.
Describing the painstaking search through the debris, Hutchins said his team will employ 6mm sieves to pick up fragments such as bones and teeth.
At a meeting with survivors earlier yesterday, police investigator Matt Bonner was met with cries of "arrest someone" as people grew frustrated with his explanations of the probe.
The incoming leader of the local authority, Elizabeth Campbell, was meanwhile heckled by one audience member.
Her predecessor as head of Kensington and Chelsea council, Nicholas Paget-Brown, stepped down over criticism of his handling of the fire.
But Campbell has been described as being disconnected from the community, after telling the BBC yesterday that she had never been into the local high-rises before taking up her new post.
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