(Reuters) — A fire at a rural South Korean hospital for chronically ill elderly patients killed 21 people and injured eight on Wednesday (May 28) in the second major fire this week while the country still mourns the deaths of more than 300 people in a ferry disaster last month.
The fire started after midnight at around 00:27 a.m. at the hospital in the southwest region of Jeolla, the local fire station said. It was put out relatively quickly but most of the victims were elderly patients who were unable to walk or move freely, leading to the large number of casualties, fire officials said.
“All of them (the victims) were the bedridden patients who were unable to escape by themselves. So despite the hospital’s initial rescue efforts, many people were sacrificed,” said the chief of the Damyang Fire Station, Lee Min Ho.
All the victims were on the second floor of one of the buildings in the hospital and most of them suffered smoke inhalation, one local fire department official said by telephone.
The hospital held patients who required long-term care, many with dementia or disability as a result of a stroke, local media reports said.
South Korea, Asia’s fourth-largest economy and a leading manufacturing powerhouse, has developed into a vibrant and technically advanced democracy, but faces criticism that regulatory controls and safety standards have not kept pace.
The country is mourning the deaths of more than 300 people who drowned when a heavily overloaded ferry capsized and sank on April 16, the country’s worst maritime disaster in 20 years.
A fire at a large shopping mall complex killed eight people on Monday when smoke and toxic fumes spread rapidly. Fire screens designed to stop the spread of fire and smoke did not function in the relatively new building.
There have since been two subway accidents that left nearly 200 people injured.