Spain: 4 dead as fire ravages residential block in Valencia

VALENCIA (Spain), Feb 23 (NNN-AGENCIES) — At least four people have died in a huge fire that gutted a multi-storey apartment block in Spain’s eastern port city of Valencia, with another 14 people injured.

The toll could rise, with 19 people missing, a source on the city council said.

The fire began around 5.30pm on Thursday on the fourth floor and spread rapidly, witnesses and the emergency services said, with images showing flames and vast clouds of black smoke engulfing the building in the Campanar neighbourhood in western Valencia.

“It can be confirmed that four people have died,” Jorge Suarez Torres, deputy director of emergency services for the Valencia region, told reporters.

Fourteen people were treated for injuries of varying degrees, including a seven-year-old child, and 12 of them were sent to hospitals, according to emergency services.

Spain’s TVE public television said there were more than 130 flats in the 14-storey building which was rapidly “reduced to a skeleton”, with 22 teams of firefighters battling the blaze.

Speaking to regional television station A Punt, Esther Puchades, deputy head of Valencia’s Industrial Engineers Association (COGITI) said the fire had spread so rapidly because the building was covered with highly flammable polyurethane cladding.

Footage on social media that was reposted by Spanish media outlets showed a father and daughter being rescued from a balcony where they were trapped.

“Please stay away from the area of the fire to let the emergency services do their work,” Valencia’s mayor Maria Jose Catala urged on social media platform X.

Writing on X, formerly known as Twitter, Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said he was “shocked by the terrible fire” and was in contact with the city’s mayor and the region’s leader “to offer whatever help needed”. He also extended his condolences to everyone affected by the blaze.

In October, a fire gutted a nightclub in the neighbouring region of Murcia, claiming 13 lives in what was Spain’s deadliest nightclub fire in three decades.

Six people have been charged as part of a manslaughter probe and could face up to nine years behind bars if the deaths were found to be the result of negligence.

The fears of polyurethane cladding exacerbating the Valencia fire recalled the 2017 tragedy at London’s Grenfell Tower.

In that incident, a fire at a 24-storey high-rise in west London killed 72 people, with the blaze spreading rapidly due to the highly combustible cladding on the block’s outside walls. A public inquiry into the disaster is still ongoing. — NNN-AGENCIES

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