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Flames engulf the Tahfiz Darul Koran Ittifaqiyah school in Kuala Lumpur early Thursday. Photo: Twitter / Berita Harian Online

Exit blocked: fire kills 24 students and two teachers at Kuala Lumpur religious school

Blaze began in the sleeping quarters on the top floor of the two-storey school building

Malaysia
Agencies

A fire that blocked the only exit to an Islamic school dormitory killed 24 people who were trapped behind barred windows, mostly teenagers, on the outskirts of Malaysia’s capital early on Thursday, officials said.

A government official said a wall separating the victims from a second exit “shouldn’t have been there”.

Firefighters and witnesses described scenes of horror – first of boys screaming for help as neighbours watched helplessly, and later of burned bodies huddled in a corner of the room.
School employee Arif Mawardy said he woke up to what he thought was a thunderstorm, only to realise it was the sound of people screaming.

Firefighters rushed to the scene after receiving a distress call at 5.41am and took an hour to put out the blaze, which started on the top floor of the building, Kuala Lumpur police chief Amar Singh said.

He said there were at least 24 charred bodies, 22 of them boys between 13 and 17, and two teachers.

“We believe [they died of] suffocation ... the bodies were totally burnt,” he said.

A body being carried out by rescue personnel. Photo: AFP

Singh said 14 other students and four teachers were rescued, with six of them hospitalised in critical condition.

The fire broke out near the only door to the boys’ dormitory, trapping the victims since the windows were barred, fire service senior official Abu Obaidat Mohamad Saithalimat said.

He said the cause was believed to be an electrical short-circuit, though Singh said the investigation was continuing.

Another fire service official, Soiman Jahid, said firefighters heard shouts for help when they arrived at the school. He said they found 13 bodies huddled in a pile on the right corner of the dorm, another eight on the left corner of the dorm and one in the middle near the staircase.

Khirudin Drahman, director of Kuala Lumpur’s fire and rescue department said it was one of the country’s worst fire tragedies in 20 years.

Local media showed pictures of blackened bunk bed frames in the burned dormitory. A resident, Nurhayati Abdul Halim, told local media that she saw the boys crying and screaming for help when the fire broke.

The charred interior of the religious school. Photo: Reuters

“I saw their little hands out of the grilled windows; crying for help. ... I heard their screams and cries but I could not do anything. The fire was too strong for me to do anything,” she said.

She added that the school had been operating in the area for the past year.

Noh Omar, Malaysia’s minister for urban well-being, housing and local government, said the school’s original architectural plan included an open top floor that allowed access to two exit staircases. But he said a wall was built dividing that floor, leaving only one exit for the dorm.

“The wall shouldn’t have been there,” he said.

Family members cry outside the school. Photo: AP

He added that the school submitted an application for a fire safety permit that hadn’t been approved.

The Darul Koran Ittifaqiyah is a private Islamic centre, known as a “tahfiz” school, for Muslim children, mainly boys, to study and memorise the Koran. Many such schools are exempt from state inspections.

The Star newspaper said there were 519 tahfiz schools registered nationwide as of April, but many more are believed to be unregistered.

The newspaper said the fire service had recorded 211 fires in such private Islamic centres since 2015. In August, 16 people fled a fire at a tahfiz school in northern Kedah state. Another tahfiz school was destroyed by a fire in May but no one was hurt.

The worst fire disaster occurred in 1989 when 27 female students at a private Islamic school in Kedah state died when fire gutted the school and eight wooden hostels.

Associated Press, Agence France-Presse, Reuters

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Teachers, boys killed in blaze at school dorm
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