Exit blocked: fire kills 24 students and two teachers at Kuala Lumpur religious school
Blaze began in the sleeping quarters on the top floor of the two-storey school building
A fire that blocked the only exit to an Islamic school dormitory killed 24 people who were trapped behind barred windows, mostly teenagers, on the outskirts of Malaysia’s capital early on Thursday, officials said.
A government official said a wall separating the victims from a second exit “shouldn’t have been there”.
Firefighters and witnesses described scenes of horror – first of boys screaming for help as neighbours watched helplessly, and later of burned bodies huddled in a corner of the room.
School employee Arif Mawardy said he woke up to what he thought was a thunderstorm, only to realise it was the sound of people screaming.
Firefighters rushed to the scene after receiving a distress call at 5.41am and took an hour to put out the blaze, which started on the top floor of the building, Kuala Lumpur police chief Amar Singh said.
He said there were at least 24 charred bodies, 22 of them boys between 13 and 17, and two teachers.
“We believe [they died of] suffocation ... the bodies were totally burnt,” he said.