The oldest high rise building in Tehran has collapsed after a devastating fire at the 15-storey Plasco
building 30 firefighters have been killed when they were trapped inside the building as it collapsed to the ground Thirty-eight firefighters had already been injured battling the blaze before it fell during alive TV broadcast Firefighters were initially able to bring it under control but it quickly flared up and then fell four hours later.
Thirty firefighters have been killed after Iran's oldest high-rise collapsed following a fire.
State
television said 200 firefighters had been called to the scene at the
15-storey Plasco building in downtown Tehran and 'tens' were trapped
inside when the building collapsed.
Thirty-eight firefighters had already been injured battling the blaze before it fell during a live TV broadcast.
'The building's caretaker and some
firefighters were inside when the building collapsed,' said Ahmad, a
shop owner in the building.
'A
friend of mine has a shop there. I keep calling him but there's no
answer. I think he's been trapped,' Mohsen, an onlooker told AFP.
The
steel skeleton of the building could be seen crashing down to the
ground as around 100 fire engines and dozens of ambulances surrounded
the area.
The building came down in a
matter of seconds, shown live on state television, which had begun an
interview with a journalist at the scene.
A
side of the building came down first, tumbling perilously close to a
firefighter perched on a ladder and spraying water on the blaze.
Police evacuated the area around the
building, fearing secondary explosions caused by gas leaks, and worked
to clear crowds that were blocking access for rescue services.
Tehran
police chief Hossein Sajedinia said: 'There a number of people inside
but we don't know how many and the fire brigade organisation is going to
announce how many were there. Even one would be too many.'
Fire
brigade spokesman Jalal Malekias said: 'We had repeatedly warned the
building managers about the lack of safety of the building.'
He added that the 15-storey building lacked fire extinguishers.
'Even
in the stairwells, a lot of clothing is stored and this is against
safety standards. The managers didn't pay attention to the warnings,' he
explained.
The fire started around 8am (0430 GMT) local time when the majority of shopkeepers were not inside the building.
Firefighters
were initially able to bring it under control but it quickly flared up
and the building fell four hours after the fire had started, at around
11:30 am (0800 GMT).
The blaze is thought to have begun on the ninth floor and spread quickly to workshops above.
The
Plasco building was the first high-rise and shopping centre in Tehran
and was the city's tallest building when it was finished in 1962, before
being dwarfed by the more recent construction boom.
It
was built by Habibollah Elghanian, a prominent Iranian-Jewish
businessman who was arrested for ties to Israel and sentenced to death
and executed after the 1979 Islamic revolution.
Source: daily mail.
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