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Dozens feared dead in Philippine mall inferno

Update Dozens feared dead in Philippine mall inferno
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This photo taken on December 23, 2017 shows firefighters extinguishing a fire at a shopping mall in Davao City on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao. (AFP)
Update Dozens feared dead in Philippine mall inferno
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Aerial view of the fire at NCCC Mall in Davao city. (Courtesy: inquirer)
Updated 24 December 2017

Dozens feared dead in Philippine mall inferno

Dozens feared dead in Philippine mall inferno

DAVAO, Philippines: At least 37 people, including call center staff from an American firm, are believed to have perished in a fire that tore through a shopping mall in the southern Philippine city of Davao, local authorities said on Sunday.
President Rodrigo Duterte, himself a Davao native, visited distraught relatives outside the burning building overnight Saturday but told them there was “zero” chance their loved ones had survived, witnesses told AFP.
The fire adds fresh misery for mainly Catholic Philippines at Christmas after a tropical storm killed at least 182 people and displaced tens of thousands in recent days, also mainly in the country’s south.
The blaze started at the four-story NCCC Mall on Saturday morning sending thick plumes of black smoke billowing into the sky over Davao.
The inferno was finally brought under control early Sunday but fire officials said they had yet to enter the section where the missing were believed to be trapped.
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The building’s top floor housed a 24-hour call center for US multinational SSI, a market research company.
Jimmy Quimsing, a retired seaman, was one of the relatives desperately waiting for news.
His 25-year-old son Jim Benedict worked at the call center and had not been in contact since the fire broke out.
Quimsing said he spoke to President Duterte and had been told to prepare for the worst.
“He told us zero, no one would survive under these circumstances,” he told AFP.
Duterte’s special assistant Christopher Go confirmed the bulk of the conversation to AFP.
Paolo Duterte, the president’s son and the vice mayor of Davao, also wrote on Facebook that fire officials had told him there was “zero” chance of anyone trapped surviving the blaze.

In a statement on its local Facebook page SSI Philippines Davao said it would set up a “command center” for relatives of those missing.
“Please continue to pray for everyone’s safety,” the firm added.
Davao fire marshal Honeyfritz Alagano said the blaze may have started with a spark on the third floor of the mall, which boasted a furniture section.
“One of our firemen here has a kid who is an (call center) agent in there. He told us some of them went to collect their stuff at their lockers and were trapped,” Alagano told AFP.
“The mall is an enclosed space with no ventilation. When our firemen tried to enter they were pushed back by smoke and fire,” she said.
Deadly blazes occur regularly in the Philippines, particularly in slum areas where there are virtually no fire safety standards.
“It’s possible that while they were working, they did not immediately notice the fire spreading,” Davao police officer Ralph Canoy told AFP, referring to the call center workers.
Davao, with a population of about 1.5 million people, is the biggest city in the southern Philippines. It is about 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) south of Manila, the nation’s capital
The president served as mayor for more than two decades and continues to go home there on weekends from his work at the presidential palace in Manila.
Most of those killed by the recent tropical storm were also in the southern region of Mindanao.
There have also been horrific fires in bigger buildings and factories, where corruption and exploitation mean supposedly strict standards are often not enforced.
Seventy-two people were killed in 2015 when a fire tore through a footwear factory in Manila. Survivors of that blaze blamed barred windows and other sweatshop conditions for trapping people inside the factory.
In the deadliest fire in the Philippines in recent times, 162 people were killed in a huge blaze that gutted a Manila disco in 1996.