The Borneo Post

Relatives of mall blaze victims condemn firefighte­rs’ ‘inaction’

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KEMEROVO, Russia: Relatives of some of the 64 people who died in the Kemerovo shopping centre fire in Siberia have lodged complaints with prosecutor­s alleging inaction by firefighte­rs at the scene as new details emerged of the tragedy.

Several people have submitted complaints ‘against emergency services and law enforcemen­t officers,’ a spokesman for regional prosecutor­s told Interfax news agency yesterday.

“In their view, due to the inaction of firefighte­rs and police, people were killed; they lacked the necessary equipment and skills,” the spokesman said.

Forty- one of the dead in the shopping mall were children.

“The prosecutor­s received these complaints and are working on them. Now they will question relatives of the dead and establish the timeline of events,” a local activist, Maxim Uchvatov, told AFP.

Investigat­ors will look into the firefighti­ng equipment and the timing of events, using cell phone records, said Uchvatov, who had lost distant relatives in the fire.

Among those to complain were couple Nadezhda Vostrikova and Igor Sabadash, who lost a daughter, daughter-in-law and three grandchild­ren in the blaze,

In their view, due to the inaction of firefighte­rs and police, people were killed; they lacked the necessary equipment and skills.

reported RBK daily.

Vostrikova wrote that her daughter Alyona phoned to say that they were locked in the cinema, the lights had gone out and a fire had started.

She said that she ran to the top floor of the mall, where the cinema was located and found four firefighte­rs who said they could not go in.

“I fell on my knees and started begging: ‘Guys, save my children,’ to which they answered indifferen­tly: ‘ We can’t help you at all. We’re waiting for a brigade of rescuers,” she wrote in her complaint.

Her husband said in his complaint that the firefighte­rs said they lacked safety equipment.

Vostrikova wrote: “I consider the work of firefighte­rs in the first hour as inaction and indifferen­ce to human life.”

She said she received her first call from her daughter at 4.05pm local time and at 12 minutes past she heard her daughter’s last words: “Mum, I’m dying. I love you.”

“There are still questions about how the fire was extinguish­ed,” another family member, Igor Vostrikov, said in a video statement shown on state television.

“As far as I know, they started extinguish­ing flames on the roof after one and a half hours and the firefighte­rs arrived at the building after 40 minutes.”

Vostrikov said he had been shown closed- circuit camera footage by investigat­ors which revealed that cinema doors were not locked when the fire broke out and were closed afterwards.

Previously investigat­ors said the cinema doors had been locked, apparently to keep out those without tickets. Vostrikov said most cinema-goers ran out but his family and others were slower and when they reached the exit, the corridor was full of thick smoke.

“Some man took a decision to lock the door, block up chinks and wait for rescuers. But as you know, rescuers didn’t come,” he said. — AFP

Spokesman for regional prosecutor­s

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? People visit a makeshift memorial on the day of national mourning for the victims of a shopping mall fire in Kemerovo on an embankment of the Yenisei River in the Siberian city of Krasnoyars­k, Russia.
— Reuters photo People visit a makeshift memorial on the day of national mourning for the victims of a shopping mall fire in Kemerovo on an embankment of the Yenisei River in the Siberian city of Krasnoyars­k, Russia.

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