Twenty-three-year-old Mohammad Alhajali had been living in the 24-story Grenfell Tower building in west London.
"It's hard to believe Mohammed is now longer with us", Almashi said, adding that the brothers had planned to attend the campaign's Eid celebration marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan next week.
The charity said he had been in a flat on the 14th floor with his brother, Omar, and the pair had tried to escape, but lost each other on the way downstairs. Mohammad and his brother Omar, 25, a student at Westminster Business School, lived together in a 14th-floor apartment in Grenfell Tower.
'He said: "Why (have) you left me.?".
"I saw the fire in the flat from outside".
Almashi said Alhajali had chosen to study civil engineering so he could go home one day and help to rebuild wartorn Syria.
Alhajali was involved in the Syrian Solidarity Campaign, an organisation that wants to bring democracy to Syria.
"They were pushing all of us, I couldn't talk, I couldn't see anything, even my fingers, nothing".
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"Mohammed Alhajali undertook a unsafe journey to flee war in Syria, only to meet death here in the United Kingdom, in his own home", she said.
The page added that the Syria Solidarity Campaign is raising money for Mohammed's funeral, with any remaining funds to be donated to his brother Omar and family.
"In my 29 years in the London Fire Brigade, I have never seen a fire of this nature, and I have seen many high-rise fires".
The group said Alhajali at one point was on the phone with a friend in Syria after unsuccessfully trying to get hold of his family in the country.
"He survived Assad, he survived the war, only to be killed in a tower block in London", Abdulaziz Almashi, a friend of Muhammad, told the Daily Telegraph.
A Syrian refugee has been named as the first victim of the towerblock inferno in London as officials expected the death toll in the tragedy to rise dramatically. He tried to call his parents in Damascus, but he couldn't get through.
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince William had arrived at a London site where community groups have gathered supplies for those affected by the tower fire disaster.





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