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Manchester Arena bombing: confusion kept firefighters away for more than two hours

Firefighters were kept away because the senior officer on duty thought there was an 'active shooter,' according to a report.
Credit: JON SUPER / AFP / Getty Images
Memorial candles are seen during a vigil on St Ann's Square in Manchester, northwest England on May 29, 2017, exactly one week after a bomb attack at Manchester Arena killed 22 and injured dozens more.

Firefighters were not allowed to go to the scene of the Manchester Arena bombing for more than two hours because of confusion about whether an attacker was still on the loose, according to an inquiry into the attack released Tuesday.

Senior British civil servant Bob Kerslake, who headed the inquiry, said "a valuable resource was not available to assist at the scene" because the fire service was "out of the loop."

A suicide bomber killed 22 people and injured scores more at an Ariana Grande concert on May 22 in Manchester.

According to the report, the first police officers were on the scene within one minute of the explosion, and more police and paramedics arrived soon after. But firefighters were kept away because the senior officer on duty mistakenly believed there was an "active shooter."

The inquiry panel said it was not able to determine whether quicker deployment of firefighters could have saved lives, saying only coroners can answer that.

But it said lives were undoubtedly saved by a police duty inspector's decision to override protocol and let police and medics stay at the arena and treat the wounded, even though it was unclear whether more attacks would follow.

Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham praised emergency workers for saving lives by taking "brave, common-sense decisions" rather than following protocol "to the letter."

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