
Kuala Lumpur: At least 23 people were killed early Thursday in a fire that broke out in the sleeping quarters of an Islamic boarding school in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, local officials said.
The city's Fire and Rescue Department received information about the blaze at 5:41 am (2141 GMT Wednesday) and managed to extinguish the fire within an hour, Kuala Lumpur police chief Amar Singh said, according to DPA.
Twenty-one of those killed were boys aged between 13 and 17 and the other two victims were teachers, Singh said. Authorities initially said 24 people had died.
"They died from suffocation and subsequently the bodies were totally burnt," Singh said.
Malaysian Health Minister Dr. S Subramaniam said in a press conference at the hospital that DNA samples would be taken from the families of the deceased as the bodies were too badly burnt to identify the victims.
Subramaniam said the traumatized families would be provided with psychological assistance.
He said that out of the seven people in a hospital, three were badly injured. Six of the injured were students and one was a resident living near the school who came to help. "We hope to be able to save the seven that are already here," he added.
The fire broke out near an entrance on the second floor. The pupils were also unable to escape through the windows.
"The sad part is, during this incident, there was only one entrance to exit through, so the students were trapped inside," Singh said.
Another 14 students and four teachers managed to escape or were rescued, he added. Muhammad Danial, a pupil who was on the second floor and who survived, told reporters on site he helped to get as many students as he could out from a window on the other side.
He said two of the survivors pulled off a grill and dived down to rescue themselves.
Prime Minister Najib Razak expressed his sympathies on Twitter: "It's sad to read Tahfiz Darul Qur'an Ittifaqiyah Center burned & killed more than 20 lives. May their souls be blessed by Allah."
Singh said it was too soon to determine the cause of the fire, however, the possibility of an electrical short circuit was being investigated.
There are 519 tahfiz (Qur'an memorization) schools registered in Malaysia.











| Quick links