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Deadly fire in religious girls dorm shakes Turkey

Tragedies similar to the deadly fire in a religious girls dorm in Turkey will continue until the mindset that causes them changes.
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A fire at a private all-girls dormitory in the Aladag district in the southern province of Adana broke out on Nov. 29. Twelve people, including the 4-year-old daughter of the dorm manager, 10 female students, the oldest of whom was 13 years old, and a 20-year-old female educator were killed. There are 24 wounded students, mostly from jumping out of the windows to escape the fire and smoke.

An obsolete electrical fuse panel and a fault in the old electricity switches were cited as causes of the fire in a preliminary report prepared by the Aladag attorney general’s office. The fire spread quickly from the lower to upper floors, ultimately resulting in the wood roof collapsing. The carpet in the dorm was made out of a material that is derived from petroleum, adding to the speed in which the fire spread. Moreover, the building’s fire exit was made of plastic and did not have handles. There is a dispute over whether the fire escape door was locked. Adana Mayor Huseyin Sozlu said the doors were locked, but Deputy Prime Minister Veysi Kaynak, who along with several other ministers and officials visited the site, quoted the prosecutor’s initial examinations and stated there was no lock on the fire escape door.

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