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Death toll in Iraq COVID hospital fire rises as anger mounts

epa08032661 An ambulance drives past people taking part in a protest as smoke rises from a burning military truck after clashes between protesters and Iraqi policemen in Nasiriyah city, some 370km southeast of Baghdad, Iraq, 29 November 2019. According to reports, at least 46 anti-government protesters have been killed in clashes with security forces in the past 24-hour in the southern city of Nasiriyah and Najaf. EPA-EFE/HAIDER AL-ASSADEE

NASSIRIYA, Iraq, July 13 (Reuters) - The death toll in a fire that spread through a coronavirus hospital in southern Iraq rose to 66, health officials said on Tuesday, as an angry crowd blaming local authorities for negligence gathered near the city's morgue.

By Ahmed Rasheed and Maher al-Saih

More than 100 others were injured in Monday night’s fire in the city of Nassiriya, which an initial investigation showed began when sparks from faulty wiring spread to an oxygen tank that then exploded, local police and civil defence authorities said.

In April, a similar explosion at Baghdad COVID-19 hospital killed at least 82 and injured 110. The head of Iraq’s semi-official Human Rights Commission said Monday’s blast showed how ineffective safety measures in a health system crippled by war and sanctions still were.

“To have such a tragic incident repeated few months later means that still no (sufficient) measures have been taken to prevent them,” Ali Bayati said.

Anger spread among people gathered at Nassiriya’s morgue as they waited to receive relatives’ bodies.

“No quick response to the fire, not enough firefighters. Sick people burned to death. It’s a disaster,” said Mohammed Fadhil, who was waiting there to receive his bother’s body.

Two health officials said the dead from Monday’s fire included 21 charred bodies that were still unidentified.

The blaze trapped many patients inside the hospital’s coronavirus ward, who rescue teams struggled to reach, a health worker told Reuters on Monday before entering the burning building.

Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi had ordered the suspension and arrest of health and civil defence managers in Nassiriya on Monday, as well as the al-Hussain hospital’s manager, his office said.

(Reporting by Maher al-Saih and Ahmed Rasheed; Editing by John Stonestreet)

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