Russian shopping mall fire claims 64 lives, criminal probe underway
A total of 64 people have been confirmed dead in a major fire that broke out at a four-storey shopping mall in Kemerovo city in southwestern Siberia on Sunday, the Russian Investigative Committee said on Monday.
A total of 64 people have been confirmed dead in a major fire that broke out at a four-storey shopping mall in Kemerovo city in southwestern Siberia on Sunday, the Russian Investigative Committee said on Monday.
The fire, which erupted on Sunday
afternoon, was reported to have been put out by Monday morning after burning
for a whole night. Yet video footage showed smoke still rising from the
building in the afternoon.
The conflagration, one of the deadliest
tragedies in the country in recent years, was believed to have started on the
shopping mall's fourth floor, which housed a cinema and children's play area,
according to Russian Emergency Services Ministry.
Totally, 25 victims have been
identified, including 13 children aged 4-13, said Russian Health Minister
Veronika Skvortsova. Witnesses told local media that many children who were
watching kids' movies in the mall's cinema were killed. Minister of Emergency
Situations Vladimir Puchkov said he expected 64 to be "the final figure of
deaths."
However, the exact number of the missing
is still unknown. Previous reports said 64 people were missing, including 41
children. Rescuers are struggling to reach the upper floors because the roof of
the four-story building collapsed.
A total of 663 people took part in the
search and rescue operation, the Emergency Situations Ministry said, adding
that their work has been complicated by strong gas contamination, high
temperatures and dense smoke.
A total of 51 people were provided
medical treatment following the incident, according to Sputnik. Thirteen people
were hospitalized, including an 11-year-old boy who remained in a grave
condition, the Investigative Committee said in a previous statement.
The boy jumped out of a window from the
fourth floor and suffered severe injuries, according to Skvortsova. The boy's
parents lost their lives in the blaze, Skvortsova said.
The Winter Cherry shopping center, a
business complex with a cinema, an indoor skating rink and a petting zoo, is
usually packed with people on Sunday afternoon. So far, five people have been
detained and interrogated, including the head of the management company
servicing the building and the tenants of the premises where the fire possibly
started, the Investigative Committee said.
The investigators were checking
information that emergency exits of the shopping mall were blocked when the
fire broke out. It also remains undecided whether to detain a guard of the
building, who allegedly disabled the warning system of the building.
The Prosecutor General's Office of
Russia instructed regional prosecutors to conduct inspections of compliance
with fire safety regulations in every shopping complex in Russian regions.
As yet, what caused the deadly blaze
remains undetermined. Several criminal cases were instituted on causing deaths
by negligence and violation of fire safety requirements, according to the
Russian Investigative Committee.
Russian President Vladimir Putin
extended "deep condolences" to the families and friends of the
victims on Sunday and ordered related authorities to provide all necessary
help. Kemerovo Regional Governor Aman Tuleyev has signed an order declaring
mourning in the region from Tuesday to Thursday.
0 Comments
Post a Comment