Arab News

Grief and anger: Iraqis demand justice as hospital blaze kills 92

President blames corruption after second COVID-19 clinic explosion in three months

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Grieving and angry Iraqis demanded justice on Tuesday after at least 92 people died when an explosion and fire ripped through a coronaviru­s hospital in the southern city of Nasiriyah.

The fire in a temporary quarantine clinic at Al-Hussein Hospital began when sparks from faulty wiring spread to an oxygen tank, which exploded.

By morning on Tuesday, only the charred remains of the building were visible, with colored blankets strewn across the blackened debris as wisps of smoke rose from the rubble. The dead included 21 charred bodies that were still unidentifi­ed.

It was the second such incident in three months, after 82 people were killed when oxygen tanks blew up at a COVID-19 hospital in Baghdad in April. President Barham Salih said both fires were “the result of endemic corruption and mismanagem­ent that disregards the lives of Iraqis.” King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia sent the president their condolence­s.

Rescue teams at the Al-Hussein clinic used a heavy crane on Tuesday to remove the melted remains of the building, and relatives gathered nearby as young volunteers cleared debris.

“This is an unforgivab­le crime,” said Abu Nour Al-Shawi. “A patient comes in looking for treatment and he ends up being carried out in a coffin by his family. This place is not even fit for animals.”

Uday Al-Jaberi, who lost four relatives in fire, said: “I want to send a message to those who committed this crime — haven’t you had enough of Nasiriyah’s blood? We don’t have a government in power, we have a mafia. We have criminals ruling the country.”

Imad Hashim, 46, whose mother, sister-in-law and niece died in the fire, said: “What should I say after losing my family? No point demanding anything from a failed government. Three days and this case will be forgotten like others.”

At the city’s morgue, anger spread among people waiting to receive their relatives’ bodies. “No quick response to the fire, not enough firefighte­rs. Sick people burned to death. It’s a disaster,” said Mohammed Fadhil, whose brother died.

A doctor at the hospital said it had no basic safety precaution­s. “The hospital lacks a fire sprinkler system or even a simple fire alarm,” he said. “We complained many times that a tragedy could happen any moment from a cigarette stub, but every time we got the same answer from health officials: ‘We don’t have enough money’.”

Prime Minister Mustafa Kadhimi ordered the suspension and arrest of health and civil defense managers in Nasiriyah, and the hospital’s manager. Government investigat­ors arrived in the city on Tuesday morning and their findings would be published next week, he said.

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 ?? AFP ?? A man in Najaf grieves at the funeral for the victims of the blaze, left, that hit Al-Hussein Hospital in Nasiriyah.
AFP A man in Najaf grieves at the funeral for the victims of the blaze, left, that hit Al-Hussein Hospital in Nasiriyah.

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