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Taiwan building fire kills 46

International Desk | banglanews24.com
Update: 2021-10-14 16:46:03
Taiwan building fire kills 46 [photo collected]

A fire tore through an apartment complex in the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung early Thursday morning, killing 46 people and leaving 41 injured.

According to Kaohsiung’s fire department, a blaze broke out around 3 a.m. in a 13-story building home to around 120 households, many of them elderly or disabled residents and workers.

One resident nearby said he heard an explosion around 2:40 a.m. and then saw the building burning as people outside yelled for those inside to get out and cars began honking their horns to alert residents.

Footage showed firefighters battling the blaze as smoke billowed from the building. In videos posted on social media, residents on the street waited for news of their relatives. Some kneeled while others called out for their parents, believed trapped inside.

“The fire was extremely fierce and as a result, many floors were severely burned,” the department said in a statement, adding that the age of the building and amount of debris collected in its stairwells had accelerated the fire and hampered rescue efforts.

The fire was extinguished around dawn and rescue operations had concluded by Thursday afternoon, with 55 people sent to the hospital.

According to Taiwan’s Central News Agency (CNA), Kaohsiung’s police said the possibility of arson had not been ruled out and that four people had been taken into custody for questioning but there were not yet any suspects.

The 40-year-old building in the popular tourist district of Yancheng had been partly abandoned, with residents only living on the building’s upper levels. Described as a “city within a city,” it was once one of the busiest in the district, housing a cinema, market and serving as a red-light district, according to local media reports. Because of its checkered past, it was known among locals as Kaohsiung’s first haunted house.

Kaohsiung City Council Speaker Zeng Li-yan called on the government to conduct an audit of other old and possibly dangerous buildings, calling such structures a “a safety blind spot due to lack of management,” according to CNA.

Taiwan’s president Tsai Ing-wen said that the government would do its utmost to relocate or assist those affected by the fire, expressing her “deepest condolences” to the victims.

Pei Lin Wu and Alicia Chen in Taipei and Lyric Li in Seoul contributed to this report.

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Source: The Washington Post

BDST: 1645 HRS, OCT 14, 2021
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