Prime Minister Theresa May says more help will be sent to the scene to help survivors cope and find alternative housing now that the 24-story Grenfell Tower is destroyed.
"I have ordered that more staff be deployed across the area, wearing high visibility clothing, so they can easily be found, dispense advice and ensure the right support is provided," May said after a meeting with survivors at her Downing Street office yesterday.
In addition, British health authorities will provide long-term bereavement counselling for those who lost loved ones in the tragedy. Counselors are already working with 52 families.
There has also been a public outcry at the government's initial failure to provide up-to-the minute information.
May, criticised in the first few days after the blaze for failing to meet with victims, says the public inquiry looking into the tragedy will report directly to her.
She says she will receive daily reports from the stricken neighborhood, where hundreds of people have been displaced. Anger among residents has been mounting in recent days as information about the missing has been scanty and efforts to find temporary housing have faltered.
The Home Office said late Saturday night it will make arrangements for the family of Mohammad Alhajali to "travel to the UK in these terribly sad circumstances."
The 23-year-old Alhajali is the only victim of the Grenfell Tower fire to be officially named as the difficult process of identifying human remains continues.
His family said in a statement that Alhajali "came to the U.K. Because he had ambitions and aims for his life and for his family."
Officials are using dental records, fingerprints and DNA samples to try and positively identify victims. They say they will also use visual elements like tattoos and scars, in the painstaking process.
Sixteen bodies have been taken to a mortuary for examination.
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