12 killed as fire guts Turkey school dormitory
Most of the dead are schoolgirls aged under 14 as reports suggest escape door failed to open
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Istanbul: Twelve people, most of them schoolgirls, were killed on
Tuesday when fire ravaged a dormitory for pupils in the southern Turkish
region of Adana, local officials said.
The fire, which officials
said was likely caused by an electrical fault, raced through the
building’s wooden interior as panicked victims tried to jump from
windows to safety.
Officials expressed concern that many of the
dead were killed after they were unable to open a closed fire door to
escape the top floors of the building.
Images showed scenes of
devastation as emergency services arrived to tackle the fire at the
dormitory building, parts of which were turned into a blazing wreck and
whose roof collapsed.
“We lost 12 of our citizens in the fire.
Eleven of them were schoolchildren and one was a tutor. 22 citizens are
injured,” Adana region governor Mahmut Demirtas told Turkish NTV
television.
“According to initial findings, we believe the fire was caused by electrical fault,” he said.
The
Dogan news agency specified that all 11 of the schoolchildren killed
were girls. Their identities have yet to be disclosed but they were also
said to be 14 or under.
The disaster took place in the town of Aladag north of Adana city, one of the biggest urban centres in the south of Turkey.
Jumped from window in panic
Television footage showed the three-storey building in flames, with fire engine teams trying to put out the blaze.
Demirtas
said some terrified schoolgirls were injured after jumping out of the
window to escape the flames. He added that none of the injuries were
serious condition.
The governor said the fire at the private
schoolchildren dorm broke out at around 7.25pm (8.25pm UAE) and it was
brought under control some three hours later.
Demirtas declined to comment on claims that fire escape stairs were locked and students were unable to use them.
But
Adana city Mayor Huseyin Sozlu said: “It appears that the fire escape
stairs door was locked. Children could not open it. Bodies were found
there,” he said.
He told NTV “of course children would have survived” if they had been able to flee down the fire escape stairs.
“From tomorrow the governor’s office will start an investigation.”
He said the children were aged between 11-14.
Students
trapped on the second and third storeys of the building who could not
flee outside, were killed in the fire, the Dogan news agency said.
The fire spread rapidly because of the building’s wooden interior and carpeted floor, officials said.
Aladag
district’s mayor Mustafa Alpgedik, quoted by the Dogan news agency,
said the fire erupted on the ground floor and then the flames spread
because the third floor was wooden.
With the burning of the wooden floor, the roof then entirely collapsed, he said.
In an agonising wait, families who could not see their children stood outside in tears, Dogan added.
The
dorm had a capacity for 54 students and was open to both secondary and
high school students. Demirtas said it was a private dormitory with 34
students in residence.
Fires are frequent in Turkey due to
antiquated and often wooden buildings and faulty electrics. But a
disaster of this magnitude is highly unusual.
In a sign of the
seriousness of the incident, several ministers were heading to the
region, including Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu and Education
Minister Ismet Yilmaz.
Demirtas meanwhile informed President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan who expressed his sadness over the catastrophe, the
state-run Anadolu news agency said.
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