Oman Daily Observer

Tehran fire chief praises bravery in tower blaze

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TEHRAN: A senior Iranian firefighte­r paid tribute on Friday to rescuers’ bravery tackling a blaze last week that triggered the collapse of Tehran’s oldest high-rise, killing 26 people.

The 15-storey Plasco building toppled on January 19 while emergency services were still evacuating people from it, four hours into the inferno.

Amir Mahdiani, a fire department commander, addressed worshipper­s at Friday prayers in Tehran’s vast Mosalla mosque as the search for those still missing in the collapse neared its end.

“If it wasn’t for the sacrifice of the firemen, maybe the building would have collapsed two hours earlier and hundreds would be buried,” he said, before bursting into tears.

His leg was in a splint due to an injury sustained during the fire.

Mahdiani said the death toll could have been lower if people had cooperated with the authoritie­s and left the building more promptly.

He urged the government to help import modern firefighti­ng equipment.

The Plasco building was Iran’s oldest high-rise and contained a shopping centre and hundreds of clothes shops and workshops.

The bodies of 15 firefighte­rs and four civilians had been recovered from the rubble by Friday while six were still missing, the fire service said. Another firefighte­r died in hospital.

Bulldozers had removed 1,600 truckfuls of rubble from the site by Friday reaching undergroun­d floors after nine days of searching with sniffer dogs.

Some of the bodies recovered were unidentifi­able and awaited DNA testing.

Authoritie­s said the firefighte­rs would be buried as “martyrs” next to those killed in a stampede during the 2015 hajj pilgrimage.

The last body was recovered late on Thursday and officials hoped to clean up and lift traffic restrictio­ns near the site by Saturday.

A deputy mayor said crews removing the rubble were set to complete the job by around 5 pm (1330 GMT) on Friday.

The damage was estimated at 15,000 billion rials ($390 million) and some 3,500 workers lost their jobs as a result of the blaze.

The government announced a relief programme to help businesses and uninsured workers. — AFP

 ?? — Reuters ?? A member of East Libyan forces holds his weapon in Ganfouda district in Benghazi, Libya.
— Reuters A member of East Libyan forces holds his weapon in Ganfouda district in Benghazi, Libya.

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