Victoria Vasey, director of North Kensington Law Centre, was quoted as saying by The Guardian that others who survived the blaze were reluctant to seek help from the authorities because they feared being detained over their unresolved immigration status.
A further problem for survivors, Vasey said, was that those sent by the Kensington and Chelsea authority to hotels for emergency accommodation last week were all informed they would have to leave by yesterday, the report said.
The problem of identifying victims, Vasey added, was being complicated by the fact that "a lot of people were irregular in their tenancies and some were subletting. Some of them were illegal subtenancies," it said.
Those who died may not be those recorded as the official tenants of a flat.
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Vasey welcomed the large number of lawyers who had volunteered to help provide free legal advice.
Daily legal clinics have been set up to advise displaced tenants on housing problems.
"Some were in the middle of applications [to be naturalised] and have lost all their papers. We are offering support to them. Some of the people feel they can't seek help because they are terrified they will be carted off to immigration detention. It's a big problem," she said.
While survivors may, at a later stage, consider bringing compensation claims or seek other ways to obtain justice, Vasey said, families are at the moment focused on more immediate needs.
Vasey wrote to the Home Office on Friday calling on officials to provide emergency help for those who have lost all their documents.
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