37 feared dead in Philippine mall blaze


A handout photo shows Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte (foreground, third from right) at a shopping mall, where a fire is ongoing, in Davao city, southern Philippines, yesterday night. He is there to comfort the relatives of those believed to be trapped inside. – Presidential Photographers Division/EPA pic, December 24, 2017.

THIRTY-seven people were believed killed in a fire that engulfed a shopping mall in the southern Philippine city of Davao, local authorities said today.

A Bureau of Fire Protection commander at the scene said the chances of the 37 surviving were “zero”, Paolo Duterte, Davao’s vice mayor, who is also the president’s son, wrote in a Facebook post.

The blaze started at the four-storey NCCC Mall yesterday morning and people were trapped inside, including in a call centre on the top floor, Ralph Canoy, a police officer in the district, told AFP.

Canoy said the fire was still going before dawn today, nearly 24 hours later.

“The fire started on the third floor, which houses products like fabrics, wooden furniture and plastic ware, so the fire quickly spread and it’s taking a long time to put out,” he said.

He said investigators believed some of those likely killed had been trapped in the call centre, which was open 24 hours a day. 

“It’s possible that while they were working, they did not immediately notice the fire spreading,” Canoy said of the call centre workers.

He said the reason for the blaze was not immediately known.

Workers recover shop equipment as a two-storey shopping centre selling garments and textiles burns in the background, while firemen battle hampered by poor water supply battle to put out the blaze that has been burning for more than 12 hours, in Manila, on January 3,  2008, The fire at the shopping mall in Pasay city in suburban Manila began at 6am. Nearby shops have been evacuated. – AFP pic, December 24, 2017.

President Rodrigo Duterte, who served as mayor of Davao for about two decades and continues to live in the city, visited the mall last night to comfort relatives of the victims, one of his aides told AFP.

Davao, with a population of about 1.5 million people, is the biggest city in the southern Philippines. It is about 1,000km south of the capital Manila.

The fire adds more misery to the mainly Catholic Philippines at Christmas, after a tropical storm recently killed at least 182 people and displaced tens of thousands. 

Many of those killed in the storm were also in the southern region of Mindanao.

Deadly blazes occur regularly in the Philippines, particularly in slum areas where there are virtually no fire safety standards.

There have also been horrific fires in bigger buildings and factories, where corruption and exploitation mean supposedly strict standards are often not enforced.

Seventy-two people were killed in 2015 when a fire tore through a footwear factory in Manila. Survivors of that blaze blamed barred windows and other sweatshop conditions for trapping people inside the factory.

In the deadliest fire in the Philippines in recent times, 162 people were killed in a huge blaze that gutted a Manila disco in 1996.– AFP, December 24, 2017.
 


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