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1 body recovered, 36 feared dead in Philippines mall fire

Fire officials: Those trapped inside likely didn't survive

By The Associated Press
Published: December 24, 2017, 12:25am

DAVAO, Philippines (AP) — Philippine firefighters recovered one body from a burning shopping mall Sunday and officials said there was “zero” chance of survival for 36 others trapped inside the four-story NCCC Mall in southern Davao city.

Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio said firefighters told distraught relatives of the 36 trapped employees of a business outsourcing company on the top floor of the building that nobody could survive the extreme heat and thick black smoke.

“They were told that the chances of survival are zero,” she said.

It is unclear when firefighters can break into most areas of the mall, where the blaze was put under control Sunday morning although smoke continued to billow from the building. The firefighters won’t stop until all those reported missing are found, Duterte-Carpio said.

Investigators will determine the cause of the fire, and the prospects of criminal lawsuits against the mall owners and officials would depend on the outcome of the investigation, said the mayor, who is the daughter of President Rodrigo Duterte.

The president, the mayor and Roman Catholic Church officials went to the site and met with relatives of the trapped office employees late Saturday and asked them to pray. The president was photographed wiping his eyes with a handkerchief, his head bowed, at an emotional moment with the relatives.

The mall’s marketing manager, Janna Abdullah Mutalib, said the fire started Saturday morning on the third floor where clothes, appliances and furniture are sold, after a storm hit Davao and flooded parts of the city. Except for a grocery on the ground floor and the outsourcing company on the top floor, the shopping areas were still closed to the public when the fire started mid-morning.

Rodrigo Duterte served as Davao mayor for many years before being elected president last year. It’s been a difficult year for the tough-talking, 72-year-old leader, who faced his most serious crisis when hundreds of pro-Islamic State group extremists laid siege on Marawi city, also in the southern third of the Philippines. He declared martial law in the south to deal with the insurrection, which troops crushed in October.

The storm that blew out of the southern Philippines Sunday reportedly left more than 120 people dead with 160 others still missing.

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