Huge fire hit Valenzuela City factory on May 13, 2015 which killed 35 people and 65 still missing as of Thursday (Updates). Body bags carrying the remains of victims. A deadly fire in the Philippines
Officials confirmed Wednesday night that at least 35 people were killed, while dozens were still trapped in the building and feared dead after the seven-hour fire. Property damage was placed at some P50 million.
Earlier, at least 65 people were reported missing by their relatives to the city’s help desk, Mayor Rexlon Gatchalian said, adding that fire officials had informed him that there were no survivors in the building after the fire was placed under control.
“More or less 35 died,” said Supt. Crisfo Diaz, deputy director for operations of the Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP) in the National Capital Region (NCR). “They died due to suffocation [and] they were burned as fire gutted the structure,” Diaz said.
Gatchalian quoted investigators as saying the fire could have been ignited by sparks from a welding job being undertaken at one of the main doors. Sparks came in contact with a blowing agent used in making slippers, starting the fire.
Senior Supt. Sergio Soriano, fire director in the NCR, said the bodies of three people had been found on the stairs, as they were attempting to escape. He identified two of the victims as Tristan King Ong and Heidi Pang, owners of the factory.
“We are still hoping that of the 65, some were able to escape,” the mayor said. But around 4:45 p.m., he quoted the BFP as saying, “No one inside the factory survived.”
District Fire Marshal Wilberto Rico Neil Kwan Tiu said he was among the first to reach the second floor of the gutted building after the fire and saw “numerous bodies,” many charred beyond recognition.
“I’m not sure if my daughter is one of them but I hope she’s alive,” Basinang said, trying to hold back tears.
Families and relatives of factory workers waited outside the factory, hoping that their loved ones would come out of the factory alive.
A woman in her late 50s asked workers who managed to get out if they had seen a woman named Leah. But no one could tell her whether Leah, possibly a secretary at the factory, was able to escape.
At the entrance of the factory, the burned body of a woman lay near the stairs. She had reached about 2 meters near the door when the fire engulfed her.
Soriano said the building had a fire exit and that 10 factory workers managed to escape through the staircase.
The workers were trapped because the fire originating from the front door spread rapidly. Some on the second floor were seen waving their hands to people below; others jumped out the windows, Soriano said.
Those on the first floor escaped through the other door, he said.
“Some tried to put out the fire, but it spread fast,” Parales said.
One of the owners, Veato Ang, said he was at the office when the fire started and that one of the supervisors pulled him out of his desk to escape.
“In just a matter of minutes, the fire spread throughout the building,” Ang said.
He said the company would help the families of the victims.
“We will do everything to assist them. We are also sad,” Ang said.
The company will shoulder the medical and other expenses of the victims, according to its lawyer, Renato Paraiso
Officials confirmed Wednesday night that at least 35 people were killed, while dozens were still trapped in the building and feared dead after the seven-hour fire. Property damage was placed at some P50 million.
Earlier, at least 65 people were reported missing by their relatives to the city’s help desk, Mayor Rexlon Gatchalian said, adding that fire officials had informed him that there were no survivors in the building after the fire was placed under control.
“More or less 35 died,” said Supt. Crisfo Diaz, deputy director for operations of the Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP) in the National Capital Region (NCR). “They died due to suffocation [and] they were burned as fire gutted the structure,” Diaz said.
Gatchalian quoted investigators as saying the fire could have been ignited by sparks from a welding job being undertaken at one of the main doors. Sparks came in contact with a blowing agent used in making slippers, starting the fire.
Senior Supt. Sergio Soriano, fire director in the NCR, said the bodies of three people had been found on the stairs, as they were attempting to escape. He identified two of the victims as Tristan King Ong and Heidi Pang, owners of the factory.
“We are still hoping that of the 65, some were able to escape,” the mayor said. But around 4:45 p.m., he quoted the BFP as saying, “No one inside the factory survived.”
District Fire Marshal Wilberto Rico Neil Kwan Tiu said he was among the first to reach the second floor of the gutted building after the fire and saw “numerous bodies,” many charred beyond recognition.
“I’m not sure if my daughter is one of them but I hope she’s alive,” Basinang said, trying to hold back tears.
Families and relatives of factory workers waited outside the factory, hoping that their loved ones would come out of the factory alive.
A woman in her late 50s asked workers who managed to get out if they had seen a woman named Leah. But no one could tell her whether Leah, possibly a secretary at the factory, was able to escape.
At the entrance of the factory, the burned body of a woman lay near the stairs. She had reached about 2 meters near the door when the fire engulfed her.
Soriano said the building had a fire exit and that 10 factory workers managed to escape through the staircase.
The workers were trapped because the fire originating from the front door spread rapidly. Some on the second floor were seen waving their hands to people below; others jumped out the windows, Soriano said.
Those on the first floor escaped through the other door, he said.
“Some tried to put out the fire, but it spread fast,” Parales said.
One of the owners, Veato Ang, said he was at the office when the fire started and that one of the supervisors pulled him out of his desk to escape.
“In just a matter of minutes, the fire spread throughout the building,” Ang said.
He said the company would help the families of the victims.
“We will do everything to assist them. We are also sad,” Ang said.
The company will shoulder the medical and other expenses of the victims, according to its lawyer, Renato Paraiso
- inquirer.net
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