Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Fire at hospital kills 37, injures scores in South Korea

- By Hyung-Jin Kim and Youkyung Lee

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA » A fire spread flames and smoke through a South Korean hospital Friday morning, killing at least 37 people, mainly from suffocatio­n, and injuring nearly 130 others in one of the country’s deadliest blazes in years. The dead included three hospital staff and several people in an intensive-care unit for respirator­y illnesses.

The fire started in Sejong Hospital’s emergency room and had engulfed the first floor when firefighte­rs arrived. They approached the second floor through the windows to rescue trapped patients, said Choi Man-wu, a fire official in the southeaste­rn city of Miryang.

He said smoke could have spread quickly through the building’s staircase at the center, but the flames were extinguish­ed before reaching the third floor. The cause of the fire wasn’t immediatel­y known. The hospital’s operations were suspended after the fire.

All the dead were from the hospital’s general ward, while all 94 people being cared for in a nursing ward for the elderly were safely evacuated after the fire, some carried on the backs of firefighte­rs, Choi said.

The state-run National Fire Agency revised the death toll to 37 from 39, citing double counting.

Ten of the injured are in critical condition, medical official Cheon Jae-kyung said in the same televised briefing, suggesting the death toll could increase. The fire agency said 125 were injured, 14 of them in serious condition.

Most of the dead had been hospitaliz­ed for respirator­y diseases in an intensive-care unit on the second floor. Two doctors and nine nurses were working in the emergency room at the time of fire.

Three of the dead worked at the hospital — a doctor who worked in the emergency room and a nurse and nurse assistant on the second floor, said Son Kyungcheol, head of the foundation that operates the hospital.

Son said in a televised briefing that the hospital did not have sprinklers as it was not required by law. Fire agency officials said the hospital wasn’t big enough to be required to install sprinklers.

Most of the deaths appeared to be due to suffocatio­n, with only one suffering burns, said an official at the National Fire Agency who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak to media. The identifica­tion of the dead was underway, he said.

Videos from local TV networks showed black smoke billowing out of the building and engulfing its entire surface. A rescuer carried on his back an elderly patient covered in a blanket as they escaped the nursing ward.

President Moon Jaein expressed regret over the blaze at an emergency meeting convened with his senior advisers. He ordered officials to provide necessary medical supports to those rescued, find the exact cause of the fire and work out measures to prevent future fires, according to his spokesman Park Suhyun.

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