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Bangla P o st Criminal investigation launched after fire broke out in East London

Post Desk : Tower Hamlets Council says it has launched a criminal investigation following a fire in which a man died.

It comes after residents at the block of flats in east London said they raised concerns about overcrowding several times.

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Father-of-two Mizanur Rahman, 41, died after the three-roomed flat in Maddocks House on Cornwall Street, Shadwell, caught fire early on 5 March.

London Fire Brigade (LFB) said 15 people left the flat before it arrived.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation and the landlord has denied any wrongdoing.

An LFB spokesperson said it was believed the fire was caused by "a lithium-ion battery" for an e-bike. The Metropolitan Police said the fire was not being treated as suspicious.

Mr Rahman was rescued from a bedroom by firefighters after they were called to the scene at 02:52 GMT. He was taken to hospital but later died.

Tower Hamlets Council said it had acted upon previous complaints about overcrowding using the powers available to the authority.

A spokesperson said: "We had visited this property previously following complaints and issued enforcement. We are now carrying out a criminal investigation under the Housing Act."

Nazmush was sleeping in a top bunk in one of the rooms at the time of the fire.

He said when he woke to check his phone, he heard a sparking noise and "in a couple of seconds it started busting".

"When I looked down it was a fire spitting like fireworks. It started exploding like a rocket, with white smoke and black smoke. And then I just shouted because everyone was asleep," he said.When the residents found out Mr Rahman had died, "every one of us cried a lot because one of us got injured and then the day he died we couldn't even look at each other's face. "Everyone was shocked, everyone was depressed," he said.

The fire follows claims from residents who told the BBC they raised concerns about the living conditions in the flat in Maddocks House but said nothing was done. One man in his 30s, who asked not to be named, said he was sleeping in one of the rooms in the flat and that 18 people had been at the property the night the fire broke out before they left the building in their pyjamas.

"We were all sleeping, someone called me and said get up, get up," he said. "We saw very black smoke… too much smoke, we [couldn't] see."The man said he was only staying in the flat because he could not find anything else, adding: "Accommodation is very difficult. I am, every day, trying to find a room. I've been trying for six or seven months."

Another resident of the flat, 34-year-old Zubayer Khan, said he had been living there for about three months.

He said there were several

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