By Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) – One of those killed in a suicide bomb attack at a concert in the English city of Manchester in 2017 would probably have survived if the response by the emergency services had not been so flawed, an inquiry concluded on Thursday. Twenty-two people – the youngest aged just eight – died in the attack and more than 200 were injured when a man detonated a bomb at Manchester Arena as parents arrived to collect their children at the end of a concert by U.S. singer Ariana Grande. In a damning report, inquiry chairman John Saunders said while there had been individu…