by Suff » 19 Jun 2017, 11:18
The tower block had 120 "one and two bedroom" apartments. The initial estimate of people affected was 400 to 600. At the upper level that's an average of 5 people per apartment.
Given that the authorities don't even know how many people lived there (to a range of some 200 people), it's going to take weeks to sift through the wreckage, find all the bodies, carry out identity checks.
This, to me, is relatively simple as MM states. Unless your relative is in a coma and can't be identified, then you can pretty much assume that they are no longer in the land of the living. I believe there are 19 seriously injured, still, it means you have to wait. Granted information needs to come out, but the dead are, exactly that, dead. The living are a very different priority and keeping relatives advised of who is alive is not the absolute first priority.
Given the state of affairs with not knowing exactly who lived there, plus other confusion, I would expect it to be fairly chaotic no matter what is in place to deal with it.
Lessons should be learned, but we live in an "instant on" technological world. People think if they have to wait 30 seconds to know something it's too long. They also try, repeatedly, to get the same information, even though they have left their name and contact details. Only making the situation worse with the poor sod's trying to answer the phones, email, twitter, farcebook and a dozen other ways to ask questions.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.