Over 23 Killed In Fire Outbreak At Iraqi Covid Hospital

Over 23 Killed In Fire Outbreak At Iraqi Covid Hospital
In this image made from video, first responders work the scene of a fire at a hospital in Baghdad on Saturday, April 24, 2021. The fire broke out in the Baghdad hospital that cares for coronavirus patients after oxygen cylinders reportedly exploded late Saturday, officials said. (AP Photo)
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No fewer than 23 people died when a fire broke out yesterday in a coronavirus intensive care unit in the capital of Iraq, a country with a severally dilapidated health infrastructure facing mounting Covid-19 cases.

The fire started with an explosion caused by ‘a fault in the storage of oxygen cylinders’, medical sources told journalists.

It spread quickly, according to the civil defence, as “the hospital had no fire protection system and false ceilings allowed the flames to spread to highly flammable products”.

Iraq’s hospitals have been worn down by decades of conflict and poor investment, with shortages in medicines and hospital beds.

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The incident sparked outrage on social media and the prime minister has called for an investigation into the cause of the blaze.

In the middle of the night, as dozens of relatives were at the bedsides of the 30 patients in the intensive care unit at Ibn al-Khatib hospital — reserved for the most severe Covid-19 cases in Baghdad flames spread across multiple floors, another medical source said.

Videos on social media showed firefighters trying to extinguish flames at the hospital on the southeastern outskirts of the Iraqi capital, as patients and their relatives tried to flee the building.

The majority of the victims died because they had to be moved and were taken off ventilators, while the others were suffocated by the smoke,’ the civil defence said.

It told Iraqi state news its members had “rescued 90 people out of 120 patients and their relatives” at the scene, but could not give an exact number of the dead and wounded.

Medical and security sources told journalists that 23 people had been killed and some fifty others injured in the blaze.

The health ministry, which did not put out a statement until several hours after the fire, said it had ‘saved over 200 patients’, and promised an official toll of the dead and wounded later.

 

AFRICA DAILY NEWS, NEW YORK

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