Nov 5, 1:34 PM EST
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Russian Nursing Home Fire Kills 30*
By STEVE GUTTERMAN
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW (AP) -- Fire tore through a nursing home in Russia, trapping
patients in fast-moving flames and choking smoke at a facility cited for
numerous safety violations including no fire alarm, officials said
Monday. At least 30 people were killed.
Horrific fires at state-run facilities have underscored the negligence,
mismanagement, corruption and crumbling infrastructure that persist
despite an oil-fueled upswing in Russia's fortunes under President
Vladimir Putin. Nearly 18,000 people are killed in fires in Russia each
year, several times the per capita rate in the United States and other
Western countries.
The fire broke out early Sunday afternoon in the two-story home for the
elderly and invalids in the Tula region south of Moscow. It spread
quickly through the 55-year-old brick building, where the wooden
interior walls burned fast, Emergency Situations Ministry spokesman
Viktor Beltsov said.
More than 250 people escaped or were evacuated, officials said. Some
jumped from windows, and a nurse described frantic efforts to save
bedridden patients - though emergency officials blamed personnel for the
high death toll.
A short circuit apparently caused the fire, officials said. Survivors
said a ceiling lamp on the second floor started smoking and fell to the
floor, which caught fire, the state-run RIA-Novosti news agency quoted
Russia's top fire safety official, Yuri Nenashev, as saying.
"When the room filled with smoke - black carbon monoxide fumes - I knew
I wouldn't have time to tie sheets together and decided to just jump out
the window," survivor Mikhail Zhuravlyov, 45, told NTV television, lying
in a hospital bed with a cast on his leg. "I jumped, and lost
consciousness for a while."
Beltsov said employees "did not organize the effective evacuation" of
residents. Nenashev also faulted personnel for beginning evacuation
efforts on the first floor rather than the second floor, where the fire
started, RIA-Novosti reported.
Valentina Chernikova, a nurse, said employees did their best to evacuate
patients, some of whom suffered from nervous system disorders. Many were
bedridden, she said.
"They had to be carried out on stretchers, on gurneys, pushed through
windows. I think we did this very quickly," Chernikova said on state-run
Vesti-24 television. She said employees had tossed mattresses and
blankets in the snow outside and hurriedly placed the patients on them.
Firefighters were alerted half an hour after the fire broke out, and
arrived five minutes later to find that the blaze had already spread
over 10,000 square feet, said Beltsov, who gave the death toll.
Television footage showed flames leaping behind a second story window
after dark, hours after the fire erupted.
Twice in the past year following inspections, fire authorities appealed
to courts to order the facility shut down because of "glaring
violations" of fire safety rules, Beltsov said. He said the building had
no fire alarm and no system that would automatically alert the fire
department of a blaze.
The nursing home in the town of Velye-Nikolskoye, about 155 miles south
of Moscow, had also been warned to replace its electrical system because
it was a fire hazard, Nenashev was quoted as saying.
Putin made no public comment about the fire, which occurred on the
National Unity Day holiday. His prime minister, Viktor Zubkov, ordered
Tula governor Vyacheslav Dudka and Emergency Situations Minister Sergei
Shoigu to ensure that survivors are cared for and the causes thoroughly
examined, Russian news agencies reported.
Dudka called the fire a "major tragedy" and said "serious conclusions"
would be drawn from the investigation, suggesting firings and
prosecutions were imminent. He also said buildings of the same design as
the nursing home would be inspected throughout the region.
The remarks echoed belated promises of action that have followed similar
fires over the past year.
In March, a fire in a nursing home in southern Russia killed 63 people.
A nearby fire station had been shut, and it took firefighters almost an
hour to get to the site from a larger town after a night watchman
ignored two fire alarms before reporting the blaze, authorities said.
In December, locked gates and barred windows prevented victims from
escaping a blaze that killed 46 women at a drug treatment center.
Inspectors had recommended its temporary closure because of safety
violations.