Dozens killed as fire rips through S.Korea hospital
AFIRE has raced through a small South Korean hospital with no sprinkler system, killing 37 people, many of them elderly, and injuring more than 140 others.
Sejong Hospital in the south-eastern city of Miryang has a separate nursing ward where 94 elderly patients were being treated, but all of them were safely evacuated, fire officials said.
Most of the victims were on the first and second floors of the hospital’s six-storey general ward, where its emergency department and intensive care unit were located.
Officials believe the country’s deadliest blaze in about a decade started in the emergency room.
Miryang police official Kim Hansu said 34 of the dead were women and 26 were in their eighties or older.
Police and forensic investigators dressed in white clothes, masks and helmets examined burned equipment in the blackened emergency department.
Dark smoke and flames were pouring from the emergency room when firefighters arrived, so they used ladders to enter second-floor windows. Some carried patients on their backs to other rescuers below, who moved them on stretchers to ambulances.
Several fabric escape chutes were hanging from the building’s sixthfloor windows after being used to evacuate patients and hospital staff.
Dozens of fire-engines and two helicopters were sent to the hospital as thick smoke blanketed nearby streets. The blaze was extinguished in about three hours.
Three of the dead worked at the hospital – an emergency department doctor and a nurse and nurse assistant on the second floor – said Son Kyung-cheol, head of the foundation that operates the facility.
The National Fire Agency said officials were trying to identify other victims.
Most of the deaths appeared to be due to suffocation, with only one victim suffering burns, a National Fire Agency official said.
Authorities said 143 people were injured, including seven who were in a serious condition.
Mr Son said the hospital did not have sprinklers because they were not required by law. Fire officials said the hospital was not big enough to require them.
Fire official Choi Man-wu said authorities were investigating whether the hospital had missed any mandatory safety inspections, although Mr Son said it had not.
If safety issues were involved, hospital and local authorities are likely to receive harsh public criticism.
In 2014 South Korea grappled with the aftermath of a ferry sinking that killed more than 300 people and exposed serious shortcomings in public safety. Officials blamed crew members’ negligence, overloaded cargo, improper storage, unprofessional rescue work and corruption by the ship’s owners.
President Moon Jae-in held an emergency meeting with senior advisers and ordered officials to provide necessary medical treatment to those rescued, find the exact cause of the fire and work out measures to prevent future cases.
South Korea is one of the fastestageing countries in the world and has many nursing hospitals, which are preferred for elderly people who need long-term medical care.
In 2014, a fire set by an 81-year-old dementia patient killed 21 people at a hospital for the elderly.
In other recent fires, 29 people were killed in late December in a building in central Seoul, which was the country’s deadliest blaze in the past decade before the hospital fire.
Last weekend, a fire at a Seoul motel killed six people. Police arrested a man suspected of setting it in anger because he had been denied a room for being drunk.