Chinese New Year Fire Destroys 97 Houses in Phnom Penh
Cambodia Daily | 9 February 2016
A fire destroyed 97 houses in Phnom Penh’s Meanchey district early
Monday morning, with authorities blaming an unattended candle from a
resident’s Lunar New Year celebration for sparking the blaze.
The fire swept through the tightly packed houses of the predominantly
Vietnamese neighborhood in Chak Angre Krom commune’s Tuol Roka village
at around midnight on Sunday, with firefighters taking until 4 a.m. to
get the blaze under control, said village chief Hor Yiev.
Mr. Yiev said there were no reports of deaths or serious injuries,
adding that authorities believed the fire was caused by a candle being
blown over by Sunday night’s strong winds.
He said efforts to extinguish the flames had been hampered by a
narrow access road that made it difficult for trucks to reach the fire,
a problem confirmed by Phnom Penh municipal fire department chief Prum
Yorth.
“We found it very hard to intervene in this incident because the
access road is so small, so we had to park the trucks on National Road 2
and carry the hoses more than 100 meters before they could be used,” he
said.
Mr. Yorth said that the first of 21 fire trucks arrived 20 minutes
after being alerted by local authorities. Despite the intervention,
which also involved two firefighting boats, he estimated that $970,000
worth of damage had been caused.
Ly Bunhiep, the local representative of the Khmer-Vietnamese
Association, said the fire had spread too quickly for people to save
their belongings.
“I told everyone to escape and take all their children away from the area of the fire,” he said in front of his destroyed house.
The remains of motorbike-taxi driver Chea Meng Cheang’s home of 11
years, a simple two-story house that had its metal roof left lying in
twisted shards on the ground, were still smoldering on Monday morning.
“I heard children yelling ‘A fire is burning down the houses!’ so I
just grabbed a small bundle of things near me and ran to my other son’s
house,” he said.
“When I returned here, the fire had reached our house and it was too
late,” he said. “I will clean the rubble today, and find some plastic
sheeting to make a tent for tonight.”
While local shopkeepers had distributed bottled water, candy and
children’s clothing to their neighbors Monday morning, many residents
said they were still awaiting official support.
City Hall spokesman Long Dimanche said that he believed the
Cambodian Red Cross would soon respond to the crisis, although he did
not have details on what kind of help would be offered.
He said fires linked to Lunar New Year celebrations were becoming a
serious public safety issue, noting the widespread practice of lighting
candles and incense sticks for the holiday.
In addition to banning fireworks and firecrackers, and informing
people of the dangers, he said that 40 fire trucks had been placed on
alert over the weekend.
Mr. Yorth, the municipal fire chief, said that five fires caused by
Lunar New Year flames had been reported over the weekend, including
one at the Khmer-Soviet Hospital, where a candle in the staff room led
to the destruction of six rooms.
“Hospital staff celebrating Chinese-Vietnamese New Year used a candle
and incense sticks, but they did not put them out before locking the
door and leaving the room,” he said.
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