Death toll from Iraq COVID hospital fire rises as anger mounts
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[July 13, 2021]
By Ahmed Rasheed and Maher al-Saih
NASSIRIYA, Iraq (Reuters) -The death toll
from a fire that tore through a coronavirus hospital in southern Iraq
rose to 66, health officials said on Tuesday, as authorities faced
accusations of negligence from grieving relatives and a doctor who works
there.
More than 100 others were injured in Monday night's fire in Nassiriya,
which an investigation showed began when sparks from faulty wiring
spread to an oxygen tank that then exploded, police and civil defence
authorities said - the second such tragedy in three months.
Rescue teams were on Tuesday using a heavy crane to remove the charred
and melted remains of the part of the city's al-Hussain hospital where
COVID-19 patients were being treated, as relatives gathered nearby.
A medic at the hospital, who declined to give his name and whose Monday
shift ended a few hours before the fire broke out, said the absence of
basic of safety measures meant it was an accident in the making.
"The hospital lacks a fire sprinkler system or even a simple fire
alarm," he told Reuters.
"We complained many times over the past three months that a tragedy
could happen any moment from a cigarette stub but every time we get the
same answer from health officials: 'we don't have enough money'."
In April, a similar explosion at Baghdad COVID-19 hospital killed at
least 82 and injured 110. The head of Iraq's semi-official Human Rights
Commission said Monday's blast showed how ineffective safety measures
still were in a health system crippled by war and sanctions.
"To have such a tragic incident repeated few months later means that
still no (sufficient) measures have been taken to prevent them," Ali
Bayati said.
The fact that the hospital had been built with lightweight sandwich
panels separating the wards had made the fire spread faster, local civil
defence authority head Salah Jabbar said.
Health and civil defence managers in the city and the hospital's manager
had been suspended and arrested on Monday on the orders of Prime
Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, his office said.
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A man inspects the damage at al-Hussain coronavirus hospital where a
fire broke out, in Nassiriya, Iraq, July 13, 2021. REUTERS/Khalid
al-Mousily
Government investigators arrived in Nassiriya on
Tuesday morning, according to a statement.
'A FAILED GOVERNMENT'
At the city's morgue, anger spread among people gathered as they
waited to receive their relatives' bodies.
"No quick response to the fire, not enough firefighters. Sick people
burned to death. It's a disaster," said Mohammed Fadhil, who was
waiting there to receive his bother's body.
Two health officials said the dead from Monday's fire included 21
charred bodies that were still unidentified.
The blaze trapped many patients inside the coronavirus ward who
rescue teams struggled to reach, a health worker told Reuters on
Monday before entering the burning building.
In Najaf, a holy Shi'ite city around 250 km (155 miles) northwest of
Nassiriya, an angry Imad Hashim sobbed as he prepared to his mother,
sister-in-law and niece, who all died in the fire.
"What should I say after losing my family," the 46-year-old said.
"No point from demanding anything from a failed government. Three
days and this case will be forgotten like others."
(Reporting by Maher al-Saih and Ahmed Rasheed;Editing by John
Stonestreet)
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