The National - News

Building collapse in Tehran kills 30

Victims all firefighte­rs putting out blaze that engulfed the old Iranian structure – rescuers dig through rubble for survivors

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TEHRAN // Thirty firefighte­rs were killed and 75 people injured when a high-rise building in central Tehran engulfed by fire collapsed yesterday.

The disaster struck the Plasco building, an iconic structure located near the Iranian capital’s sprawling bazaar.

Firefighte­rs, soldiers and other emergency responders dug through the rubble, looking for survivors.

Iran’s state- run Press TV announced the firefighte­rs’ deaths, without giving a source for the informatio­n. Local Iranian state television said 30 civilians were injured in the disaster, while the state-run Irna news agency said 45 firefighte­rs had been injured.

Firecrews battled the blaze for several hours before the collapse. The fire appeared to be most intense in the building’s upper floors, home to garment workshops where tailors cook for themselves and use kerosene heaters for warmth in winter.

Police tried to prevent shopkeeper­s and others wanting to rush back in to collect their valuables from entering the building. Tehran’s mayor, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said there were “no ordinary civilians” trapped under the rubble. But witnesses said some people had slipped through the police cordon and gone back into the building. The president, Hassan Rouhani, ordered interior minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli to investigat­e and report the cause of the incident as soon as possible, Irna reported.

He also ordered the ministry to ensure the injured were cared for and to take immediate action to compensate those affected by the disaster. The building came down in a matter of seconds, with the collapse shown live on television, where an interview with a journalist at the scene had just started. A side of the building came down first, tumbling close to a fireman perched on a ladder and spraying water on the blaze. A thick plume of brown smoke rose over the site after the collapse. Onlookers wailed in grief.

Among those watching the disaster unfold was Masoumeh Kazemi, who said she rushed to the building as her two sons and a brother had jobs in the garment workshops occupying the upper floors of the high-rise.

“I do not know where they are now,” Ms Kazemi said, crying.

At a nearby intersecti­on, Abbas Nikkhoo stood with tears in his eyes. “My nephew was working in a workshop there,” he said. “He has been living with me since moving to Tehran last year from the north of the country in hopes of finding a job.”

Earlier, Jalal Maleki, a fire department spokesman, told Iranian state television that 10 fire stations had responded to the blaze, which was first reported about 8am. He later said authoritie­s had visited the building many times to warn them about conditions there.

“They stacked up material on staircases, although we warned them many times,” he said. Yes- terday afternoon, another fire broke out at a building next to the collapsed tower.

Firefighte­rs worked to put it out.

Several embassies are located near the building. Turkey said its embassy was evacuated as a precaution, although it suffered no damage as the tower collapsed. The Plasco building was an iconic presence on the Tehran skyline.

The 17-storey tower was built in the early 1960s by Iranian Jewish businessma­n Habib Elghanian and named after his plastics manufactur­ing company.

It was the tallest building in the city at the time of its constructi­on.

Elghanian was tried on several charges, including espionage, and executed in the months after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

 ?? Reuters ?? The fire appeared to be most intense in the building’s upper floors, home to garment workshops where tailors use old kerosene heaters.
Reuters The fire appeared to be most intense in the building’s upper floors, home to garment workshops where tailors use old kerosene heaters.
 ?? Abedin Taherkenar­eh / EPA ?? Firefighte­rs battled the blaze for several hours before the iconic structure came crashing down.
Abedin Taherkenar­eh / EPA Firefighte­rs battled the blaze for several hours before the iconic structure came crashing down.
 ?? Abedin Taherkenar­eh / EPA ?? Thirty civilians and 45 firefighte­rs were injured as police prevented residents from going back for valuables.
Abedin Taherkenar­eh / EPA Thirty civilians and 45 firefighte­rs were injured as police prevented residents from going back for valuables.

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