Thousands of people have reportedly been left homeless after fire swept through a Kenyan slum on Sunday evening, killing at least four.
Residents used sewage water in a desperate attempt to douse the flames which had engulfed their homes in the Lang'ata area of the capital, Nairobi.
The MP for the area, Nixon Korir, said fire engines which turned up to help did not have enough water.
The fire was finally out by 06:00 local time (03:00 GMT) on Monday.
Police have begun an investigation into the blaze, which began at 20:00 local time on Sunday and continued for 10 hours.
It is feared, as they comb through the wreckage of the homes, more bodies may be found.
Meanwhile, anger over the perceived failings of the fire service has spilled over from the settlement itself to social media, where people are questioning where the government's priorities lie.
Just three months ago, the picture of a beaming President Uhuru Kenyatta , testing the hosepipe of a new fire engine, flanked by Nairobi Governor Mike "Sonko" Mbuvi, was shared widely as Kenyans hoped the days of the country's inadequate disaster preparedness were finally over.
The governor shared the picture on Twitter last October, when he said the newly-elected Nairobi County government had acquired 24 new fire engines. Mr Mbuvi tweeted: "This equipment will go a long way in curbing fire situations that have been witnessed in the recent past."
But in Nairobi's first major fire since then, the fire department failed terribly. But why?
Not for the first time, the fire engines ran out of water. And when they needed to refill, they had to make a 20km (12 mile) round trip from the Kijiji settlement back to the city centre.
Pius Masai, chairman of the National Disaster Management Committee, said the area has no fire hydrants. Residents desperately scooped up any liquids they could lay their hands on, including a sewer, but they could only do so much.
Only four or fire engines were deployed. That was too small a number for the inferno, which reportedly left nearly 6,000 people homeless.
Questions will be raised about why the authorities did not send more engines to the scene. Mr Masai was caught on camera appealing for more engines.
The military did not help, even though the Langata Barracks is located barely a kilometre from the area. The Kenyan military usually helps civilians out in times of disaster. It is unclear why they could not deploy this time, when they could literally see the fire from their gate.
bbc