The report by Lord Kerslake into the emergency responses to the May 22 terrorist bombing of the Manchester Arena last year has been released, offering both praise and criticism for the handling of the atrocity.
Of particular notice to the report was the fact that the Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS) did not manage to arrive on the scene of the attack for at least two hours, despite having an average response time of six minutes. The report's explanation for the lapse was a combination of "poor procedures" and communication failures.
The failure of the National Mutual Aide Telephony system, which is operated by Vodafone on a contract with the Home Office, also prevented the setting up of a casualty bureau until at least four hours after the occurrence of the attack.
As noted in the report, the Manchester attack, which claimed the lives of 22 mainly teenaged victims and injured 512 others, was the deadliest terrorist event on British soil since the London Underground bombings of July 2005. The suicide bomber was 22-year-old British citizen Salman Abedi who was believed by police to have undertaken bomb-making training overseas.