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People feared dead after explosion at shop in west London

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Specialist equipment and sniffer dogs are being used to search through rubble after a gas explosion at a shop in west London - but the fire brigade has said they believe people have died.

The explosion happened underneath flats in the Southall area.

London Fire Brigade (LFB) said crews were undertaking a "complex operation" at the scene - and a child and four adults have already been rescued.

Station Commander Paul Morgan said: "Our crews continue to search the property using specialist equipment including the use of a USAR dogs.

"Sadly we believe that there are fatalities within the property although we're unable to confirm numbers at this stage. The explosion caused substantial damage to the shop and structural damage throughout.

"It is a painstaking and protracted incident with firefighters working systematically to stabilise the building and search for people involved. We'd ask for people to avoid the area at this time.

"In the initial stages firefighters rescued four adults and one child were rescued at the rear of the property using a ladder. A further 14 adults and two children self evacuated from surrounding properties."

LFB said they were called just before 6.40am, adding that six fire engines and about 40 firefighters are at the scene.

A spokesman said the windows of the shop were "completely blown out" in the incident.

The Metropolitan Police said the incident is not being treated as suspicious and is believed to be a gas explosion.

The force said a large explosion was found to have taken place inside a shop and a man was found injured.

A London Ambulance Service spokeswoman said they have treated and discharged one person, and they are continuing to work with other emergency services at the scene.

https://news.sky.com/story/people-feared-dead-after-explosion-at-shop-in-west-london-12110268
 
Southall: Two people killed in shop gas explosion

Two people have been killed in a suspected gas explosion at a shop in west London, firefighters have said.

The blast happened in a hair salon and mobile phone shop on King Street, Southall, just after 06:30 BST.

Four adults and a child are known to have been rescued by the London Fire Brigade (LFB).

Earlier, the Metropolitan Police said one man was found injured. The blast is not being treated as suspicious, the force said.

Station Commander Paul Morgan said: "Our crews continue to search the property using specialist equipment including the use of urban search-and-rescue dogs.

"We can confirm that sadly two people have died at the scene.

"The explosion caused substantial damage to the shop and structural damage throughout.

"It is a painstaking and protracted incident with firefighters working systematically to stabilise the building and search for people involved."

LFB said search and rescue operations have finished for the evening and will restart in the morning.

Jatinder Sing, the owner of Dr Phone, said he was in "total shock" when he received a call about the blast.

'Lost everything'
The 36-year-old said: "They have closed off everything. It seems like an explosion of a gas cylinder and there is a flat upstairs and my shop is downstairs.

"I was shocked because my shop looks totally dead, finished and the same with the barber.

"I can't see anything from where I am standing apart from the the shutter and the main door, which is all trashed.

"I have lost my everything. We were struggling from the coronavirus period as well - too much stock in the shop and no sales for a long time so I don't know how we will survive."

Resident Nurmila Hamid who lives nearby said she felt the blast as she was getting her children ready for school.

The 38-year-old said: "The house shook, and I turned to my husband and said 'what is that?'

"And he said, 'It's a blast' and he went to look after taking the children to school - he said it was at a phone shop."

Mohammad Rafiq, 78, who lives two streets away, said he and his 76-year-old wife felt "shocked" and "scared" when the noise from the King Street blast woke them at their home.

He said: "I heard it in the morning - it woke me up, it was scary. It sounded like a very dangerous blast so I was scared.

"We didn't sleep after that."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-54629771
 
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