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Moscow hospital fire kills dozens | Moscow hospital fire kills dozens |
(about 2 hours later) | |
A fire at a Moscow drug rehabilitation hospital has killed 42 people. | |
Arson is the suspected cause of the blaze which broke out at Moscow's Hospital 17, in the south-west of the city, early on Saturday morning. | |
Firefighters said the fire spread from the second floor of the building, with heavy smoke asphyxiating patients. | |
Recommendations earlier this year to close the hospital on fire safety grounds had been ignored, a senior official said. | |
Fire safety officers visited the hospital in February and March, and called for its temporary closure after their second visit, said Russia's chief fire inspector Yuri Nenashev. | |
"Unfortunately this decision was not adopted," said Mr Nenashev. | |
Firefighters rescued 160 people from the building, and 10 have been hospitalised with carbon monoxide poisoning. | |
Two staff are among the dead. | |
'Windows barred' | 'Windows barred' |
The hospital had been slow to raise the alarm, said a spokesman for the Moscow fire brigade. | |
"Secondly, the hospital personnel worked very badly, they did not take steps to evacuate people in the early stages of the fire," said Yevgeny Bobylyov, the Associated Press news agency reported. | |
A further problem was the lack of exits. | |
"It was a very particular building with five storeys and only one exit and bars on the windows because it was a drug treatment hospital," said Irina Andrianova, a spokeswoman for Russia's Emergencies Ministry. | "It was a very particular building with five storeys and only one exit and bars on the windows because it was a drug treatment hospital," said Irina Andrianova, a spokeswoman for Russia's Emergencies Ministry. |
Signs of arson | |
She said the actual area of the fire was not large, but the thick smoke quickly became a problem. | She said the actual area of the fire was not large, but the thick smoke quickly became a problem. |
More than 20 fire engines were sent to the site, where they battled the flames and smoke for an hour before bringing the blaze under control. | More than 20 fire engines were sent to the site, where they battled the flames and smoke for an hour before bringing the blaze under control. |
"The fire was relatively small, only 100 square metres. But there was very thick smoke, and people got poisoned by smoke in their sleep," one rescue official told Russia's Itar-Tass news agency. | "The fire was relatively small, only 100 square metres. But there was very thick smoke, and people got poisoned by smoke in their sleep," one rescue official told Russia's Itar-Tass news agency. |
Fire inspector Yuri Nenashev said that he was "90%" sure the fire was started deliberately. | |
"No technical means such as heaters, wires or such were found... there was only a wooden shelf, which was the fire's centre, and that indicates arson," he said. |