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Hotel blaze kills 15 in the Philippines
A FIRE rapidly swept through a budget hotel in the northern Philippines early yesterday, burning to death 15 people and injuring 12 others. Nine of the victims were nursing students in town to take a licensing exam, officials said.
Some firefighters, shocked by the sight of the badly burned bodies in the upper floors of the five-story hotel, were moved to tears and prayed before retrieving the remains, fire investigator Daniel Abana said.
The fire raged for eight hours and gutted the Bed and Breakfast Pension House in Cagayan Province's capital of Tuguegarao City.
The students who survived the fire went on to take the exam yesterday, including one who showed up in slippers and pajamas.
Relatives grieved at a morgue where remains of victims, 14 burned beyond recognition, were brought. Some fainted as body bags were brought into a funeral parlor.
"Their families spent fortunes to send these children to school only to see them end that way," Abana said.
The fire started on the ground floor, apparently fueled by car tires and other combustible materials stored in an automobile parts store. Paint cans also may have been in the building, which was recently renovated, Abana said.
Dozens of guests were rescued by firefighters and police out of the still-smoldering building through the main gate and fire escapes. Some managed to escape on their own but others may have panicked and got trapped by the flames, Cagayan Police chief Mao Aplasca said.
The dead included nine nursing students. The rest were members of the family that owned the hotel, including three children, Aplasca said.
Many of the dead had crammed in bathrooms on the top two floors. One victim had a foot stuck out of a window in a desperate attempt to survive, Abana said.
At least 12 nursing students were taken to hospitals with minor burns. The building was still smoldering when firefighters broke in and scrambled to search for the 15 victims, police said.
"It's so close to the Christmas holiday, we wept when we saw their bodies," Abana said.
A nursing college instructor, Romeo Opido, told police that about 36 nursing students from nearby provinces were at the hotel in Tuguegarao, about 350 kilometers north of Manila. At least 27 escaped and 9 were missing, he said before the bodies were discovered.
Many Filipino students from middle-income and impoverished families have taken nursing courses in recent years in the hope of landing relatively high-paying jobs abroad.
Investigators have not determined the cause of the fire.
Some firefighters, shocked by the sight of the badly burned bodies in the upper floors of the five-story hotel, were moved to tears and prayed before retrieving the remains, fire investigator Daniel Abana said.
The fire raged for eight hours and gutted the Bed and Breakfast Pension House in Cagayan Province's capital of Tuguegarao City.
The students who survived the fire went on to take the exam yesterday, including one who showed up in slippers and pajamas.
Relatives grieved at a morgue where remains of victims, 14 burned beyond recognition, were brought. Some fainted as body bags were brought into a funeral parlor.
"Their families spent fortunes to send these children to school only to see them end that way," Abana said.
The fire started on the ground floor, apparently fueled by car tires and other combustible materials stored in an automobile parts store. Paint cans also may have been in the building, which was recently renovated, Abana said.
Dozens of guests were rescued by firefighters and police out of the still-smoldering building through the main gate and fire escapes. Some managed to escape on their own but others may have panicked and got trapped by the flames, Cagayan Police chief Mao Aplasca said.
The dead included nine nursing students. The rest were members of the family that owned the hotel, including three children, Aplasca said.
Many of the dead had crammed in bathrooms on the top two floors. One victim had a foot stuck out of a window in a desperate attempt to survive, Abana said.
At least 12 nursing students were taken to hospitals with minor burns. The building was still smoldering when firefighters broke in and scrambled to search for the 15 victims, police said.
"It's so close to the Christmas holiday, we wept when we saw their bodies," Abana said.
A nursing college instructor, Romeo Opido, told police that about 36 nursing students from nearby provinces were at the hotel in Tuguegarao, about 350 kilometers north of Manila. At least 27 escaped and 9 were missing, he said before the bodies were discovered.
Many Filipino students from middle-income and impoverished families have taken nursing courses in recent years in the hope of landing relatively high-paying jobs abroad.
Investigators have not determined the cause of the fire.
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