Bangkok Post

Fire kills at least 7 at dormitory

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SEOUL: A fire that likely blocked a crucial exit at a low-cost dormitory-style housing facility in central Seoul killed at least seven people and injured 11 others yesterday, according to fire authoritie­s who were investigat­ing possible safety lapses in the building.

The blaze has been extinguish­ed, but it’s possible that the death toll could rise, officials at the Seoul Metropolit­an Fire and Disaster Headquarte­rs said.

The fire probably started near an exit door on the building’s third floor, Kwon Hyeok-min, chief of Seoul’s Jongno District Fire Station, told reporters. The facility’s residents were mostly manual labourers who made their living on day-to-day jobs, he said.

“It was dawn and the exit door was likely blocked, so it would have been difficult [for the residents] to escape,’’ Mr Kwon said.

Another official from the Jongno station said the facility, which was built in 1983, did not have sprinklers because current safety regulation­s can’t be retroactiv­ely applied to older structures. The official, who didn’t want to be named, citing office rules, said it was unclear whether the building’s smoke detector worked.

The facility, called goshiwon in Korean, is where poor workers relying on constructi­on jobs or students preparing for bar exams or civil service exams stay in individual rooms with tiny sleep and study spaces. Budget travelers also often stay in such facilities.

South Korean media reported that most of the victims were manual labourers in their 40s to 60s. The fire agency couldn’t immediatel­y confirm the reports.

The facility was located on the second and third floors of a three-story building, where the fire agency said all the victims were found. Its first floor has restaurant­s.

South Korea, one of Asia’s richest economies, has struggled for decades to improve safety standards and change widespread attitudes that treat safety as subservien­t to economic progress and convenienc­e.

Forty-six people died in January when a fire ripped through a small hospital with no sprinkler systems in the southern city of Miryang. It was the country’s worst fire since 2008, when 40 people died at a refrigerat­ed warehouse in Icheon, near Seoul. Twenty-nine people were killed in a building fire in Jecheon in December of last year.

 ?? PHOTOS BY AP ?? ABOVE South Korean firefighte­rs check the site of a fire in Seoul, South Korea, yesterday.
PHOTOS BY AP ABOVE South Korean firefighte­rs check the site of a fire in Seoul, South Korea, yesterday.
 ??  ?? LEFT Firefighte­rs and police officers work at the gate of the low-cost dormitory-style housing facility where several people died.
LEFT Firefighte­rs and police officers work at the gate of the low-cost dormitory-style housing facility where several people died.

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