Kuala Lumpur school fire kills students and teachers
At least 23 students and teachers have died in a fire at
a religious school in Malaysia's capital, Kuala Lumpur.
The fire at the Tahfiz Darul Quran Ittifaqiyah broke out in
the early hours of Thursday morning.
The victims are thought to been trapped in their dormitory
as the windows were barred with metal grilles.
"It is one of the country's worst fire disasters in the
past 20 years," Khirudin Drahman, director of the fire and rescue
department, told AFP.
Initial counts put the death toll at 25, but police later
revised that down by two.
Police said the dead were 21 students - all boys between the
age of 13 and 17 - and two staff members.
Ten people were taken to hospital, and four are thought to
have serious injuries.
Relatives of the victims arrived in the morning |
The blaze was
reported at around 05:40 local time on Thursday morning (21:40 GMT Wednesday).
According to the police it began in the sleeping quarters.
In Islamic tahfiz
schools - where children study the Koran - students often live at the school.
Images and videos
circulating online showed the entire upper room of the school ablaze.
"Based on our
initial investigations, the position the victims were found in indicated that
they tried to escape through the windows but were stopped due to the fixed
grilles on the windows," fire and rescue department operations deputy
director Soiman Jahid said.
He said police were
still investigating what caused the fire but that it likely was caused by short
circuit or a lit mosquito repellent coil.
Local
media report the school could have been operating against government
regulations, because its fire safety permit application was allegedly still
pending.
Malaysia's urban
wellbeing and housing minister said there had been 29 fire incidents at tahfiz
schools in the country since 2015.
Malaysian
authorities have raised concerns about safety measures at unregulated private
religious schools.
Earlier this year an
11-year-old schoolboy died in hospital after
reportedly being beaten by a warden at a religious school.
Picture from inside the school showed charred beds and scorched windows on the top floor |
A neighbour living
next door to the school told the Reuters news agency they heard screams and saw
the flames.
"The children
were crying for help, but I couldn't help them as the door was already on
fire," he said.
One window appears
not to have had metal bars, Reuters said, citing a 15-year-old student who
described having seen eight children escaping through it and climbing down a
water pipe.
Kuala Lumpur Police
chief Amar Singh said the bodies were "totally burned".
"Unfortunately
there was only one entrance, so they could not escape. All the bodies were
found lumped on one another."
Officials said fire engines were at the site within minutes,
and the blaze was put out within an hour.
Prime Minister Najib Razak tweeted his sympathies to those
affected while a government minister said the incident should be quickly
investigated "so that we will be able to prevent future disasters".
"We sympathise with the families. It is one of the
worst fires involving so many lives in the capital in recent years, said Loga
Bala Mohan, according to AFP.
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