Rescuers searching explosion scene in Jersey ‘expect to find more’ bodies

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Rescuers Searching Explosion Scene In Jersey ‘Expect To Find More’ Bodies
Jersey Police chief Robin Smith said specialist teams will continue their ‘meticulous and painstaking search’ of the area in St Helier. © PA Wire/PA Images
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By Laura Parnaby, Ben Mitchell and Rebecca Speare-Cole, PA

Rescuers searching the scene of an explosion in Jersey in which three people have been confirmed dead said they “expect to find more” bodies, with around 12 residents still missing.

Robin Smith, chief of Jersey Police, said specialist teams will continue their “meticulous and painstaking search” of the area in St Helier and warned it is likely to be “weeks” before investigations are completed.

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The force earlier said the mission is now a “recovery operation” for “around a dozen” missing people and they no longer expect to find anyone alive.

A blast destroyed the three-storey Haut du Mont block in Pier Road in the Channel Island’s capital at about 4am on Saturday.

Chief of Jersey Police Robin Smith
Jersey Police chief Robin Smith said recovery efforts will take weeks (Aaron Chown/PA)

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Mr Smith told a press conference on Sunday: “We have moved to a recovery stage, it’s a moment to think about the families.

“We have deployed family liaison officers to the families; it’s utterly important we are sensitive to their emotions as we begin a meticulous and painstaking search of the debris following the explosion.”

He added: “We are not going to be here for days, we are going to be here for weeks, and it’s important I make that clear.

“It is not going to happen quickly, it’s going to happen carefully and sensitively.”

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St Helier explosion
Emergency services at the scene of the explosion and fire (Government of Jersey/PA)

Mr Smith added it “looks likely” that the blast was a gas explosion but this has not been confirmed.

Chief Minister Kristina Moore told reporters that the wider community of Jersey has been “immensely shocked and saddened” by the incident and the government had been “overwhelmed” by their “offers of support”.

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Jersey chief fire officer Paul Brown acknowledged that something had gone “horribly wrong” and his service will be “co-operating fully” and “transparently” with investigations into what caused the blast.

Mr Brown earlier confirmed that firefighters had been called to the building at 8.36pm on Friday and had carried out investigations after residents reported smelling gas – just hours before the blast.

St Helier explosion
Firefighters were called to the building hours before the blast after residents reported smelling gas (Aaron Chown/PA)

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Specialist teams from other parts of the UK, including the Isle of Wight and Hampshire, have been drafted in to aid the response.

Andium Homes, a state-owned but independent company which rents out thousands of properties on the island, said it is focusing on supporting residents at the estate.

Gas supplier Island Energy said it is working with the fire service to “understand exactly what has happened”.

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