San Francisco Chronicle

Officers detain 7 boys in dormitory blaze that killed 23

- By Eileen Ng Eileen Ng is an Associated Press writer.

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Police said Saturday they have arrested seven boys suspected of intentiona­lly starting a fire at an Islamic boarding school that killed 23 people because students there had teased them.

Kuala Lumpur police chief Amar Singh said the boys, ages 11 to 18, were rounded up since Friday night after they were identified in CCTV footage from a neighborin­g building that showed them near the school the night of the fire.

The predawn blaze Thursday at a three-story tahfiz school, where Muslim boys study and memorize the Quran, blocked the lone exit to a dormitory on the top floor, trapping students behind barred windows. Two adults and 21 students, between 6 and 17 years old, were killed.

“From our investigat­ion, the motive behind the mischief was due to a misunderst­anding after the suspects and some

tahfiz students mocked each other a few days before the fire,” Singh said at a news conference.

Singh said six of the seven suspects tested positive for drugs. Two of them had been detained before, one on charges of vehicle theft, another for rioting, he said.

He said it is believed that two cooking gas tanks were brought up to the top floor and used to start the fire, which spread rapidly and took firefighte­rs an hour to extinguish.

Singh said the seven are all school dropouts and will be under police remand for a week. He said the case has been classified as murder and mischief by fire.

Singh said the school is also being investigat­ed for flouting building safety rules.

Officials have said the school was operating without a fire safety permit and license, and that a dividing wall was illegally built on the top floor that blocked the victims from a second exit.

Firefighte­rs and witnesses have described scenes of horror — first of boys screaming for help behind barred windows, and later of burned bodies huddled in corners of the room.

The charred bodies were released Friday to family members after being identified through DNA testing and buried the same day.

The fire has renewed calls for better regulation of religious schools, mostly privately run and not supervised by the Education Ministry because they come under the purview of state religious authoritie­s.

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