San Diego Union-Tribune

FIRE RAZES DORMITORY IN GUYANA, KILLING 19

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An overnight fire raced through a dormitory in Guyana, killing at least 19 students and injuring several others at a government boarding school serving remote, mostly Indigenous villages, authoritie­s said Monday.

“This is a horrific incident. It’s tragic. It’s painful,” President Irfaan Ali said, adding that his government was mobilizing all possible resources to respond to the disaster and care for survivors.

The fire broke out about 10:50 p.m. Sunday in the dormitory building of a secondary school in the southweste­rn border town of Mahdia, a gold and diamond mining community about 200 miles south of the capital, Georgetown, the government said in a statement.

There was no immediate word on the cause of the fire.

Nearly all the victims and those injured are girls, according to Dr. Vickita Nandan at Georgetown Hospital. A 5-year-old boy also is being treated.

Officials initially said 20 students were killed but later updated the toll to 19, with several others injured. National security adviser Gerald Gouveia said the figure was revised after doctors revived a critical patient that “everyone thought was dead.”

“When firefighte­rs arrived on the scene, the building was already completely engulfed in flames,” Guyana’s Fire Service said in a statement. “Our heartfelt sympathy goes out to the relatives and friends of those young souls.”

The department said 14 students died at the scene and five others at a local hospital. Officials said two children remain in critical condition and four have severe injuries. Six students were flown to Georgetown for treatment, while five others remain at a hospital in Mahdia, with another 10 under observatio­n.

“Firefighte­rs did manage to rescue some 20 students by breaking holes in the northeaste­rn wall of the building,” the department said. “Our team is still on the ground investigat­ing as we seek to provide clarity regarding how the fire started and all other necessary informatio­n.”

The school serves mostly Indigenous children aged 12 through 18, Gouveia said. He said it was too early to speculate what might have caused the fire, adding that heavy thundersto­rms in the area posed a challenge to those responding by air.

 ?? GUAYANA’S DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INFORMATIO­N VIA AP ?? An overnight fire destroyed a dormitory in Mahdia, Guyana, killing at least 19 students.
GUAYANA’S DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INFORMATIO­N VIA AP An overnight fire destroyed a dormitory in Mahdia, Guyana, killing at least 19 students.

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