Grenfell Tower fire: Five-year-old victim Isaac Paulos formally identified by police
Five-year-old Isaac Paulos has been formally identified as the youngest victim of the Grenfell Tower fire.
His family said they will forever miss their "kind, energetic and generous little boy".
Isaac, who lived with his family on the 18th floor, was found on the 13th, Westminster Coroner's Court was told.
The boy, who vanished in the dense fumes as his family attempted to escape the blaze, choked to death on fumes from the fire. He is believed to be one of the youngest victims of the deadly blaze, which claimed at least 79 lives.
In a statement, his parents said: "Isaac our beloved son was taken from us when he was only 5-years-old.
"We will all miss our kind, energetic, generous little boy. He was such a good boy who was loved by his friends and family."We will miss him forever, but we know God is looking after him now and that he is safe in heaven."
Theresa May has called for a "major national investigation" after results showed cladding on 95 buildings has now failed tests being undertaken in the wake of the Grenfell Tower disaster. The Prime Minister made the proposal at cabinet on Tuesday, after hearing how every single piece of cladding tested so far on buildings from 32 different local authorities has been found to be potentially dangerous.
It comes after the firm which supplied the panels used in the cladding of Grenfell Tower stopped global sales for high rise blocks on Monday.
The Government has asked councils and landlords across the country to send samples of any potentially dangerous cladding to London for testing as soon as possible.
During the cabinet meeting on Tuesday, May told ministers: "There will need to be a major national investigation into what's gone wrong, when cladding that's failing the tests has been fitted on buildings in this country over a number of decades."
Officials later said the new investigation could form a second phase of the public inquiry already announced focussing on the Grenfell Tower fire.