MASSIVE HOSPITAL BLAZE KILLS 41 IN SOUTH KOREA
MIRYANG, South Korea (Reuters) - Once famous for an
award-winning film of the same name, the South Korean city of Miryang became a
scene of horror on Friday as flames and toxic smoke swept through a hospital,
killing at least 41 people and injuring more than 140.
South Korea’s
deadliest fire in almost a decade followed one last month that killed 29
people, reviving concern over safety standards, as the hospital director said
current law did not require the building to have a sprinkler system.
“So many lives were
sacrificed and the people of our city, as well as those throughout the country,
have fallen into deep grief,” the city’s mayor, Park Il-ho, told reporters,
appearing visibly distressed.
Many patients
“walked though fire and smoke” to escape from the Sejong Hospital as the main
exit was on the first floor, which was ablaze, a city official told Reuters.
Those on upper
floors used ladders and plastic escape slides to flee, while firefighters
carried some who could not walk.
“I saw the elderly
patients scrambling out through the windows and had to help,” said Woo
Young-min, 25, as he stood in his pyjamas outside the hospital.
South Korean rescue workers remove the bodies of victims after a fire at a hospital building in Miryang on January 26, 2018. Photo: AFP |
The presidential
Blue House initially said the number of dead was at least 41, but deferred to a
toll of 37 from the fire chief of Miryang, which is about 270 km (170 miles)
southeast of Seoul, the capital, and home to about 108,000 people.
Fire officials
posted a list of at least 26 victims outside the hospital, their ages ranging
from 34 to 96 years, with at least a score over 70.
Families crowded
round a handwritten list of names and hospital rooms that officials had
scrawled on a wall at a nearby funeral home.
The fire broke out
around 7.30 a.m. (2230 GMT) at the rear of the emergency room on the hospital’s
first floor, fire official Choi Man-woo told a televised news briefing.
The street outside
the hospital featured in the 2007 South Korean drama “Miryang,” or “Secret
Sunshine,” which garnered awards at Cannes and other film festivals.
But on Friday,
witnesses described scenes of chaos in the sub-freezing temperatures, as nearby
residents rushed to take portable hotpacks to shivering victims.
Woo said he was
walking home after working a graveyard shift when he saw the fire and patients
trying to escape the blaze.
“The firefighters
were shouting at us not to go inside the building, so I stayed and helped
others bring the patients down the slides.”
Television broadcast
images of black smoke billowing from the windows and entrance of the hospital
as flames flickered.
At least 177
patients - most of them elderly - were at the hospital and an adjacent nursing
home when the fire broke out, hospital director Song Byeong-cheol told
reporters.
Song said three of
the nine hospital staff on duty at the time died, including at least one
doctor, a nurse, and a nurse’s aide, all killed on the second floor.
Most of those who
died were on the first and second floors, said Choi, but added that there were
no deaths from burns.
Seven people were
critically injured, while 126 had less serious wounds, officials told a Friday
evening briefing.
The injured were
treated at 14 regional hospitals.
By Friday afternoon,
police had cordoned off the burnt-out hospital, as forensic investigators
combed the smoke-blackened building. Charred debris and shattered glass
littered the ground outside.
NO SPRINKLER SYSTEM
Asia’s
fourth-largest economy, with one of the world’s fastest ageing populations,
South Korea has faced criticism in recent years over inadequate safety
standards.
Song said the
six-storey hospital did not have a sprinkler system and was not large enough to
require one under the law.
The nursing home
annexe, where no patients died, is covered by a new law, however, and Song said
the hospital had planned to begin installing a sprinkler system there next
week.
Health Minister Park
Neung-hoo said the government would consider changing the law.
Interior ministry
guidelines published in December 2016 suggest sprinklers for all buildings of
six or more storeys.
Officials said they
were still investigating the cause of the fire, but were looking at a possible
short circuit in the emergency room’s heating and cooling system.
“According to an
initial eyewitness, fire broke out where there are two air-conditioning and
heating devices in the emergency room,” Song said.
“Others said an
electric spark occurred on the ceiling of the emergency room and then fire
spread quickly.”
The hospital had
regular safety inspections and was built to government standards, with fire
exits and extinguishers, many of which were used during the fire, he added.
President Moon
Jae-in held an emergency meeting with top aides and urged “all necessary
measures” to help survivors.
Interior Minister
Kim Boo-kyum, who visited Miryang to apologise for the fire, promised
government help for victims, Yonhap news agency said.
In December, 29
people were killed in a blaze at an eight-storey fitness centre in Jecheon
City, most of them women trapped in a sauna by toxic fumes. The event fed anger
over reports of shoddy construction, among other shortcomings.
In 2014, a fire at a
rural hospital killed 21 people, while a 2008 warehouse fire outside Seoul
killed 40.
Source: Reuters
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