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New York City fire tragedy kills eight children, one adult
By our reporter
9 March 2007
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In the latest inferno devastating the poorer sections of the
American working class, eight children and one adult were killed
late Wednesday night in a fire that destroyed a century-old, four-story
building in which more than two dozen people lived in the Highbridge
section of the Bronx, in New York City. As many as 19 people were
injured and five remained hospitalized Thursday evening, three
of them children still unconscious.
All the victims were members of three immigrant families from
the West African country of Mali. The owner of the building, Moussa
Magassa, a former carpenter in the citys school system,
lived there with his wife and 11 children. Five of them, all young
boys, died: Bilaly, 1; Djaba, 3; Aboukary, 6; Mahmadou, 7; and
Bandiogou, 11. Moussa Magassa was visiting relatives in Mali at
the time of the fire, and was informed of the tragedy in a phone
call from his brother.
Fatoumata Soumare, 45, threw two of her unconscious children
from windows three stories above ground to be caught by neighbors
and rescuers, in a desperate effort to save their lives. Driven
by the flames, she then jumped herself. Both children and their
mother died.
The horrible scenes recalled the Triangle Shirtwaist fire of
a century ago, when immigrant sweatshop girls jumped to their
deaths to escape flames. It was the citys deadliest fire
since the 1990 Happy Land social club inferno in the Bronx that
killed 87 people, almost all of them Honduran immigrants.
When the fire broke out, Mrs. Soumare called her husband, Mamadou,
a cab driver working the night shift, on his cell phone. He called
911, and then rushed back to the house, but too late. In addition
to his wife, he lost his three-year-old son Djibril, 3, and seven-month-old
twins Sisi and Harouma. His fourth child, seven-year-old Hassimy,
survived.
As in a long series of such tragedies, the social element is
what stands out as the cause of the deaths: the poverty and oppression
that affect tens of millions of working class families, especially
pronounced in the immigrant neighborhoods of New York City, where
real estate is among the most expensive in the world.
As many as four families, a total of 22 people, lived in the
building at 1022 Woodycrest, a single-family house that had been
subdivided into two apartments. They had left Mali, one of the
poorest countries in the world, crippled by drought and a century
of French colonial rule. They lived in a building that was more
than 100 years old, made of wood, without working smoke detectors,
and without a fire escape. Initial reports suggested that a space
heater was the cause of the fire: New York City is in the midst
of a near-record cold wave.
The Highbridge neighborhood is only a few blocks from Yankee
Stadium, home of the most lucrative franchise in professional
sports, owned by billionaire George Steinbrenner. Another billionaire,
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, all but blamed the residents
of the building for the fire tragedy.
Using stoves, using space heaters, these are dangerous
ways to heat a house, Bloomberg told a press conference
after the disaster. The central heating was working. It
is still working. The Fire Department checked it this morning.
It wasnt a case where there was not heat.
There were two smoke detectors, Bloomberg added.
Unfortunately, neither had batteries in them. He also
said that the residents had not responded to the fire in the way
prescribed by fire officialswhich includes shutting the
door behind them if they see flamesand they had also delayed
calling 911, trying to get out of the building first.
Given that the adults were all immigrants from a French-speaking
country, it is quite possible they were unfamiliar with such procedures
and could have had language difficulties in calling in an alarm.
There have been no reports on the families legal status,
but that could have inhibited them from calling the authorities
as well.
See Also:
Seven die in Pennsylvania
house fire
[23 February 2007]
Deadly house fire in Petersburg,
Virginia: the human cost of social inequality
[1 February 2007]
US: Chicago fire kills
six children
[5 September 2006]
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