28 Killed, Dozens More Feared Dead in Philippines Factory Fire
At least 28 people were killed and dozens more feared dead after a fire tore through a factory producing flip-flops in the Philippine capital Manila on Wednesday, the city's fire marshal said.
Firemen said they counted 28 bodies but were only able to retrieve three as the gutted building threatened to collapse after the blaze, which began before noon (0400 GMT), destroyed the building.
"They were lying side by side, but all I could see were their bones," the Manila fire marshal, Senior Superintendent Sergio Soriano told AFP.
Rex Gatchalian, mayor of the industrial suburb of Valenzuela where the blaze occurred, told AFP before the death toll was announced that 67 workers were unaccounted for.
Factory guard Mervin Ardes, one of the survivors, told AFP "more than 50" people were at work at the time of the disaster.
The fire sent a huge column of black smoke above the metropolis of 14 million people.
"I'm hoping against hope that they're still alive," Gatchalian said of the missing.
Gatchalian told wailing relatives outside the burning flip-flop factory earlier that none of those trapped inside had survived the fire.
Security guard Ardes said "more than 50" employees had punched in their time cards at his post by the gate earlier Wednesday before they began work.
- 'Few people were able to escape' -
Sparks from welding equipment used to repair a broken inner gate ignited flammable chemicals stored nearby, he added.
"It happened so fast that few people were able to escape," he said, adding workers downstairs who were blocked by flames and smoke also fled upstairs where the bodies were later seen.
Fire engines lined the street outside as night fell, with firemen continuing to direct their water cannons at the blackened building, which was bathed with beams from search lights.
The reek of foul-smelling chemicals hung in the air.
City officials drew up an official list of potential victims from the accounts of relatives who said they had yet to locate family members who were on duty at the factory at the time the blaze struck.
A distraught factory worker Nedy Neverio, 35, joined other relatives gathered outside, anxiously awaiting word of her elder sister Nora Verenzuela, 42, and two nephews.
"Someone told us no one escaped from the area where she was assigned" packing flip-flops into bags, Neverio told AFP.
"My sister's workplace was near the chemicals. She was not able to get out because the flames had spread," Neverio added.
Injured survivor Emma Santa Agata told ABS-CBN television many of her fellow workers were trapped at their work stations on the second floor.
"My boss and I were running out when we were blocked by fire and smoke," Santa Agata said.
"There was a sudden explosion and he got hit on the arm," said the woman, whose hair was singed according to the network.
Huge and sometimes deadly fires at sprawling slums as well as factories are a common occurrence in the Philippine capital, where fire safety regulations are sometimes willfully disregarded.
In one of Manila's deadliest-ever fires, 162 people were killed and 94 others injured at a disco in 1996.
Last year, 18 years after the blaze, two shareholders of the club and seven city building safety inspectors were sentenced to prison terms of up to 10 years for allowing the nightclub to operate without adequate safety precautions.