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Scene at ABC day care chilling, Calderon orders investigation
The scene at the ABC day care center in Mexico is being described as "chilling". The deadly fire at the Mexico day-care center has claimed the lives of thirty-eight children so far, and Mexico's President Felipe Calderon has ordered a government investigation.
An emotional President Felipe Calderón, the father of two young boys, ordered a government investigation and, during a speech on Saturday, offered his prayers to the parents of those who died.
“I want to express in the name of the federal government, of all Mexicans and of me personally, our condolences to the mothers and fathers for this tragic accident,” he said. Mr. Calderón later visited two hospitals in Hermosillo and spoke with several children who were recovering.
The scene at the ABC day care center was chilling, with charred baby clothes, blackened bassinets and toys littering the sidewalk. Holes had been punched through the wall of the center to evacuate the children, and a frantic caravan of ambulances and cars had shuttled the children, who ranged in age from 6 months to 5 years, to the hospital.
“Where’s God?” a police officer who participated in the rescue cried out in tears, according to a radio report. Neighbors pitched in to save as many children as they could after teachers ran from the smoke-filled center to sound the alarm.
“We passed their little bodies from one of us to the next to get them out,” Roberto Bustamante, a neighbor, told the newspaper Reforma.
Gov. Eduardo Bours of Sonora said 142 babies, toddlers and young children were being watched over by six employees when the fire broke out about 3 p.m., the news media reported.
Mr. Calderón ordered the government to assist the families of those who died, and he called on the attorney general to find the cause of the fire. It was believed to have started at a nearby store or tire depot and then to have spread to the day care center, which provided services for the Mexican Social Security Institute in a working-class neighborhood.
Political parties said they would suspend campaigning for elections in July. With only about half of the victims identified by Saturday morning and a number of survivors admitted with injuries, parents sat outside hospitals awaiting word on the fate of their children. The toll continued to rise through the day.
Questions were already being raised about whether the deaths could have been prevented. Some news reports said the center lacked working emergency exits.
Several burn victims of the Mexican day care are being treated at the Shriner's Hospital for Children in Sacramento, California.
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (3)
at 00:26 on June 7th, 2009
I'm glad regulations are much stricter here, not that it could have prevented the fire I suppose, but apparently there was only the front door, the back was bolted, according to news reports. And 24 kids per adult?
at 00:28 on June 7th, 2009
"but apparently there was only the front door, the back was bolted, according to news reports. And 24 kids per adult?"
Unbelievable! Thank you for reading, commenting, and for the recommendation, Blue Crush.
at 06:37 on June 7th, 2009
My heart goes out to those families. There are no sufficient words to say, only silence.