The Herald (South Africa)

Infants die in hospital blaze

Anger, trauma after fire guts maternity ward in Baghdad tragedy

- Khalil al-Murshidi

AFIRE tore through the maternity ward of one of Baghdad’s largest hospitals yesterday, killing at least 12 premature babies, medical and security officials said.

Jassem Lateef al-Karkh, from the Baghdad health directorat­e, said only seven babies could be saved.

Iraq health ministry spokesman Ahmed al-Rudeini said the blaze at the Yarmuk hospital in west Baghdad had been started by an electrical fault just after midnight.

“Twenty-nine women patients who were in the same ward were evacuated to other hospitals,” he said.

Security services sealed off the area as forensic teams searched the gutted ward and angry relatives massed outside, waiting for informatio­n.

Charred incubators could be seen outside one of the entrances to the hospital, access to which was strictly controlled by the police.

The grief of the bereaved parents and relatives was compounded by the fact that the babies’ young age and the effects of the fire made it very difficult to identify the bodies.

Umm Ahmed came to the hospital on Tuesday when a close relative of hers gave birth. The baby had died in the inferno and the mother had suffered burns, she said.

“I am looking for our child, they told me ‘go find him in the fridge’,” the middle-aged woman said.

“I found him in a small cardboard box, but I’m not even sure if it’s our child or a piece of sponge. It looks like charcoal.

“I just want our child. Somebody give him to me,” she cried.

An official at Iraq’s interior ministry confirmed the death toll from the fire and said three other babies were being treated for smoke inhalation.

Many of Baghdad’s public hospitals are poorly maintained and offer sub-standard healthcare.

The lack of adequate public services, such as quality medical care, electricit­y and water supply, has angered the public and led to a series of protests over the past year.

“The hospital is very old and doesn’t have fire equipment,” Karkh said.

The authoritie­s were criticised in the aftermath of an attack in the Karrada district of Baghdad last month that killed at least 323 people.

The truck bomb blast claimed by the Islamic State group sparked fires in shopping arcades on either side of the street that accounted for a significan­t proportion of the casualties.

Witnesses complained that the fire brigade had been unacceptab­ly slow in responding to the emergency.

Iraq is one of the world’s top oil producers, but conflict and endemic corruption have prevented that wealth from translatin­g into better living conditions for Iraqis. – AFP

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