Los Angeles Times

50 firefighte­rs die in Iran disaster

A historic, beloved high-rise collapses in a fire. ‘This landmark of modernity is gone.’

- By Shashank Bengali and Ramin Mostaghim shashank.bengali @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Mostaghim reported from Tehran and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

TEHRAN — A historic high-rise in the heart of Tehran caught fire and collapsed Thursday in a giant cloud of smoke, killing dozens of firefighte­rs who were battling the blaze, Iranian news media reported.

At least 50 firefighte­rs were killed in the collapse of the 17-story Plasco Building, a symbol of modernity that was constructe­d in the early 1960s, the official Islamic Republic News Agency said.

Local news media quoted emergency operations officials as saying at least 70 people were believed trapped under the wreckage. More than two dozen had been hospitaliz­ed.

Rescue dogs were helping the hunt for survivors as police cordoned off several blocks in an area populated with embassies just north of the capital’s main bazaar.

President Hassan Rouhani asked the Interior Ministry to investigat­e the cause of the fire, which broke out on the top floors shortly after 8 a.m. while garment merchants were doing business and tour guides were leading visitors through the building.

Videos on television and social media captured the shock of Iranians at the scene, some bursting into tears, others holding their heads.

“This landmark of modernity is gone,” said Siavash Ramesh, a tour guide who was working in the building Thursday morning.

The building was a familiar and beloved part of the low-slung capital’s scattered skyline, erected during a decade of rapid economic growth under Iran’s former monarchy and attached to a large shopping mall.

A rectangula­r block that seemed drab by today’s standards, it was for a generation of Iranians the tallest and most magnificen­t highrise in the country.

It also stood out for its builder: a Jewish plastics tycoon, Habib Elghanian, who was executed in the months after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Iran’s ruling mullahs accused Elghanian, the head of a prominent associatio­n of Jewish Iranians, of spying for Israel.

For some Iranians, the building’s collapse was akin to losing a family member.

“Our landmark monument is gone, right before our eyes,” said Nasrin Sadvand, a Tehran resident who was near the site.

Others saw deeper meaning in the building ’s collapse. Ramesh, the tour guide, recalled the story of how a political activist who opposed the ruling theocracy was allegedly dropped from the top of the building by security agents for refusing to disclose sensitive informatio­n.

“The building took revenge from the people who misused it,” Ramesh said.

 ?? Ebrahim Noroozi Associated Press ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS WORK at the site of the collapsed Plasco Building. At least 70 people were believed trapped under the rubble. The tower was for a generation of Iranians the most magnificen­t high-rise in the country.
Ebrahim Noroozi Associated Press FIREFIGHTE­RS WORK at the site of the collapsed Plasco Building. At least 70 people were believed trapped under the rubble. The tower was for a generation of Iranians the most magnificen­t high-rise in the country.

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