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8 killed in high-rise building fire in Shanghai

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Gan Ning

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8 killed in high-rise building fire in Shanghai


(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-11-15 18:01


SHANGHAI - Firefighters have brought under control a blaze that killed at least eight people in a downtown Shanghai apartment block Monday, municipal authorities said. Firefighters had entered the building to put out remaining flames and rescue residents, according to a statement from Shanghai municipal publicity office.

<table style="font-size: 14px;" border="1"> <tbody></tbody></table>The 28-story building at the intersection of Jiaozhou Road and Yuyao Road in Jing'an District was being renovated when it caught fire at about 2 pm, said the statement. More than 90 people have been taken to nearby hospitals and more than 100 residents had been rescued from the building, which houses 156 families.

Residents of the building and three neighboring apartment blocks had gathered in nearby shelters, waiting for temporary accommodation arrangements from the rescue headquarters, the statement said. Residents said the building, built in the 1990s, housed mainly teachers from several schools in Jing'an, many of whom were retired.

The fire was brought under control after fire fighters set up hoses on top of a nearby building. The upper half of the building, which was beyond the reach of fire appliances, was engulfed by flames. The statement said the cause of the fire was as yet unknown, but a witness said he saw construction materials burning before the fire climbed up the scaffolding and quickly spread.

A total of 25 fire units and 61 fire engines were dispatched to the scene.
At least three helicopters are hovering over the burning building, trying to rescue residents from the roof, but their efforts are being hampered by thick smoke.

A resident surnamed Zhang, who lives on the top floor, said she and a dozen neighbors escaped down the fire exit stairs. "At first, I saw smoke belching out of the window and soon the room was engulfed by smoke too," said a woman worker surnamed Qian, who was installing thermal insulation on the 28th floor, and escaped down the fire exit stairs.


 
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Gan Ning

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Firefighters try to extinguish the fire at a high-rise apartment building in Shanghai, Nov 15, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]


 
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Gan Ning

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Firefighters try to extinguish the fire at a high-rise apartment building in Shanghai, Nov 15, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]


 
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Gan Ning

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A burning high-rise apartment building is seen in this picture taken on Nov 15 in Shanghai. [Photo/Xinhua]


 
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Gan Ning

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A rescue helicopter hovers over the burning high-rise apartment building, Shanghai, Nov 15, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]


 
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Gan Ning

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Rescuers help a person who was injured in a high-rise building fire in Shanghai, Nov 15, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]


 
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Gan Ning

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The blaze scene at the site in Yuyao Road,Shanghai on Nov 15,2010. [Photo/sina.com]

A rescue operation was underway on Monday after a 28-story residential building was engulfed in flames in Shanghai, Xinmin News reported.
The fire started around the 10th floor of the apartment building in Yuyao road, in Jinggan district of the city at 3:09 pm.



 
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Gan Ning

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The fire burns in a residential building in Yuyao Road,Jing'an district in Shanghai, Nov 15,2010. [Photo/Xinmin.cn]

Witnesses said the flames can be seen engulfing the whole building, trapping a number of people on the roof and on scaffolding being used for repairs. Firefighters and police are on scene attempting to rescue those trapped inside and the cause of the blaze is still under investigation. Witnesses said score of fire engines are still arriving on scene as the blaze rages out of control. The billowing tower of smoke can be seen across Shanghai and other buildings surrounding the site are being evacuated.

 
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Four detained after Shanghai apartment fire kills 53


Four detained after Shanghai apartment fire kills 53


Tue Nov 16, 2010 3:35am EST
By Farah Master and Anita Li

SHANGHAI (Reuters)- Chinese police held four suspects on Tuesday after a Shanghai apartment fire that killed at least 53 people was blamed on unlicensed welding, official media said. The fire, which gutted a 28-storey high-rise in China's busy commercial hub, was sparked by "unlicensed welding carried out contrary to rules," Xinhua news agency said, without citing a source.

"Four suspects have been detained by public security," said the report. It did not say whether those detained were workers or managers. The swift steps to assign blame for the fire that swept up the 85-meter-high building showed how worried officials are to ease alarm among residents about the more than four hours it took to put it out.

"We feel that the fire rescue measures and methods weren't fast enough, and secondly they weren't vigorous enough," Du Deyuan, a 66-year-old resident who said he lived on the 26th floor and was out when the fire broke out. "People live in high-rises, and then you have this burn all the way from low down to the 28th storey, burned so the whole building is blazing red. What could the people inside do?"

China's rapid urban growth is throwing up vast numbers of new high-rise buildings, and while major fire disasters have been relatively rare compared to other developing countries, safety maintenance can be lacking. "Putting out fires in high-rise buildings is a problem for fire-fighting internationally," Xinhua cited Chen Fei, chief of fire-fighting in Shanghai, as saying. "Controlling the blaze was very difficult," he added, noting that trucks with ladders and extensions could not get close.

Police Minister Meng Jianzhu said risks of such fires were rising. "Now is a period when fire disasters can easily occur, and we have to conscientiously absorb the lessons of this disaster," he told officials in Shanghai, according to the Ministry of Public Security website (www.mps.gov.cn). As well as 53 confirmed killed, 70 residents were taken to hospital, including 17 with serious burns, said Xinhua.

Last year, 1,076 people were killed and 580 injured in fires in China, according to the Ministry of Public Security, which also controls fire-fighting services. It is common to find fire exits blocked or locked in many Chinese buildings, ostensibly to stop thieves or because the space is being used for storage, and fire extinguishers are not widely available.

Meng sought to head off public disquiet about the blaze in Shanghai, a city with an urban population of about 13 million which has just finished hosting an expo intended to showcase it as a modern, global metropolis. "Quickly smooth people's emotions and defuse conflicts," he told officials. "Get to the bottom of the cause, clarify its nature, determine responsibility and deal with this sternly according to the law."

A department building fire in northeastern province of Jilin earlier this month killed at least 19 people and injured 24. In early 2009, a hotel being built next to the half-finished, hyper-modern new headquarters of Chinese state television in Beijing was consumed by fire after a fireworks display went wrong. One fireman died.

(Additional reporting by Michael Martina, Sally Huang, Ben Blanchard and Chris Buckley in Beijing and Jason Subler in Shanghai)

 
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Firefighters try to extinguish a fire at a building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


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Firefighters try to extinguish a fire at a building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


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Firefighters try to extinguish a fire at a building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


 
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Gan Ning

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Firemen search for survivors at a burning building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


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Firefighters try to extinguish a fire at a building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


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People watch a burning residential building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


 
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Gan Ning

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Firefighters try to extinguish a fire at a building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


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Two men hold up a sign with the name of a missing relative near a burning building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


 
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Gan Ning

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A man takes a photo of a burning building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


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Rescue workers wheel a victim out of a burning building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


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Firefighters try to extinguish a fire at a building in Shanghai, November 15, 2010.


 

chobolan

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset

Arrests after China apartment inferno


Unlicensed welders have been blamed for the fire that engulfed a high-rise apartment in Shanghai that killed 53 people.

By Daniel Bird 12:59PM GMT 16 Nov 2010

The blaze gutted a 28-storey residential building in China's busy commercial hub, sending plumes of black smoke over the city. "The fire started because someone was illegally welding on the 10th floor and the spark led to the big fire," said Cheng Jiulong, deputy head of the Shanghai police.

"The sparks hit the nylon mesh on the outside of the building." He also confirmed that eight people would be charged with "responsibility for a major accident" but refused to give any details on who had been detained. Firefighters took over four hours to put out the blaze that engulfed the 278-foot-high building.

Du Deyuan, a 66-year-old resident of the 26th floor who was out when the fire broke out, said: "We feel that the fire rescue measures and methods weren't fast enough, and secondly they weren't vigorous enough. "People live in high-rises, and then you have this burn all the way from low down to the 28th storey, burned so the whole building is blazing red. What could the people inside do?"

China is experiencing rapid growth in urban areas which is leading to vast numbers of new high-rise buildings. While fire disasters have been relatively rare compared to other developing countries, safety maintenance can be lacking. Fifty three people have been confirmed killed in the fire and 70 residents were taken to hospital, including 17 with serious burns.


 

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Alfrescian (Inf)
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People from another building watch firefighters extinguish a fire on an apartment building in downtown Shanghai on Monday Nov. 15, 2010. (AP Photo)​
 

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Alfrescian (Inf)
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A huge fire engulfs a high-rise in Shanghai, after construction scaffolding surrounding the building initially caught fire, spreading to the building itself on November 15, 2010. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)​
 
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