Egypt’s theater blaze kills 32
Middle East Desk Report
BENI SUEF (Egypt)—An actor knocked over a candle on a stage filled with
billowing paper, starting a blaze that killed at least 32 people, many
as they struggled to escape the packed theater through the only
available exit, officials said.
Egypt’s health minister said he expected an investigation to examine why
so many people died in the fire late Monday at the Culture Palace in
Beni Suef, a town 60 miles south of Cairo. Health Minister Mohammed Awad
Tag Eddin said Tuesday he expected an investigation to examine both the
fire’s cause and why so many people died.
Fire codes will also be considered in the investigation, said Mustafa
Alwy, a high-ranking official in the culture ministry, which runs the
theater. Egypt requires safety measures such as fire extinguishers but
does not strictly enforce them.
Sixty people were injured in the fire, and 36 remained hospitalized
Tuesday morning. Eighteen people were in critical condition, said
security officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were
not authorized to talk to the media.
Officials believe the fire began with the toppled candle, then spread
quickly to the stage set, which was lined with paper bags to look like a
cave. Audience members trampled each other trying to get out the one
door, which was partially blocked by a piece of wood.
The theater had another exit but it was covered in the same paper as the
set and had caught fire, so the crowd rushed for the other, said
Mohammed Arafat Yassin, 27, while recovering at Beni Suef hospital.
“Everyone was trying to save themselves and they were falling all over
each other,” he said. “It was like being inside a barbecue grill.
Everyone was burning.” The theater, a cement building, was gutted.
The 32 dead included three actors who were performing and two
journalists covering the play, security officials said. The cultural
center was on the third day of a nine-day theater festival featuring
plays by troupes from around Egypt.
About 1,000 people were watching a theater group from nearby Fayoum
perform “Grab Your Dreams,” when the fire broke out about 11:45 p.m.
Monday. The troupe’s director, who had designed the set, was among those
killed, said theater director Samir Khalili. The play was set in a zoo,
and the stage was made to look like a cave inside one of the animal
cages: The ceiling, floor and walls were covered with paper bags painted
to resemble stone, and in the middle of the stage was a “mountain” also
made of paper. There were candles all over the set, survivors said. In
the final scene, one of the actors was shaking another character to wake
him, and the movement knocked over one candle, said Yassin, a lawyer and
the director of another play in the festival. “The room became engulfed
in flames. The flames were like an ocean spreading across the theater,”
said another survivor, Mohammed el-Amrousi, 23, an acting student. |