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Passazh in Ruins: Shoppers burned along with it

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  • Passazh in Ruins: Shoppers burned along with it

    Kommersant, Russia
    July 12 2005

    Passazh in Ruins

    // Shoppers burned along with it

    Arson

    Yesterday in Ukhta (Komi Republic), two unknown persons threw Molotov
    cocktails at the Passazh shopping center owned by local businessman
    Vladimir Gevorkian. Nineteen female customers and two male employees
    died in the fire. Another five people are in critical condition.
    Investigators are convinced that organized crime groups from among
    Slavic convicts serving sentences in Ukhta, who have long dreamed of
    forcing Caucasians out of business in the city, are behind the crime.
    There has never before been a fire with so many victims resulting
    from arson in Russia. Sergey Dyupin has the details.


    A Fire of Republican Significance

    The fire in the Passazh shopping center located in the old city
    center on Oktiabrskaya Street started exactly at 14.00. It developed
    swiftly after breaking out on the first floor of the building; a wall
    of flame raced through a long, narrow corridor to the only exit,
    cutting off the escape route for all shoppers and salespersons
    gathered on the first and second floors. Within several seconds, the
    fire ascended a staircase to the second floor, penetrated the small
    shops located on both sides of the corridors, and spread into the
    attic.

    `The situation instantly became critical,' a city fireman involved in
    putting out the fire and evacuating the victims told Kommersant.
    `This happened because, during construction, subsequent renovations,
    and operation of the building, elementary fire safety requirements
    were not observed.'

    As specialists explained, the store owners were worried about their
    own image. They faced the old building dating from the 1950s with
    brick, installed double-glazed windows, made European-style
    renovations inside, and hung advertisements outside. There was a lot
    of emphasis on protecting the goods - all the windows were enclosed
    in metal grilles and steel doors equipped with alarms were installed
    at both entrances. At the same time, the two interior corridors that
    ran along the length of the entire building were so narrow that two
    shopping carts could not pass one another. The emergency exit from
    the store was locked altogether. On the inside, the building was
    finished with combustible synthetic materials; and because there was
    no provision for air conditioning in Passazh, in hot weather, all the
    windows had to be left open.

    `Earlier, there was a sixteen-room wooden barrack for deportees in
    this building,' the fireman explained. `After renovations, this
    barrack was turned into respectable, expensive shopping center, but
    the building's safety was still at the barrack level. So when the
    fire broke out, Passazh turned into a real crematorium.'

    People cut off by the fire rushed out into the narrow smoke-filled
    corridors and collapsed after inhaling toxic fumes. The passageway
    before the only open exit from Passazh became jammed, so that even
    those who had managed to remain conscious were prevented from getting
    out. People tried without success to break off the grilles on the
    second floor. Someone beat on the locked steel door at the other
    emergency exit, but his attempts were also unsuccessful. A store
    security guard managed to save about ten people. After miraculously
    escaping outside, he immediately drove his jeep to the wall of the
    burning building, fastened the winch hook to the grille of a window
    near the fire escape, and pulled it out. Fear-maddened people raced
    to the opening and clung to the stairs, but only a few of them
    managed to get down them. Most simply collapsed.

    By the time the first firefighting crews arrived, the whole building,
    from the first floor to the roof, was engulfed in flames. All the
    firefighters could do was surround the building and flood it with
    water. After about two hours, the fire was extinguished, but then the
    burnt-out floors and roof collapsed under the weight of the water.
    However, at that point, there was no one left alive in Passazh.

    It was only towards late evening, after investigators had sifted
    through the wreckage, that the first summaries of the disaster
    appeared. Twenty-one people, almost all of them women, died in the
    fire, and almost as many were in hospitals suffering from burns,
    carbon monoxide poisoning, and injuries received from jumping from
    the second floor. Doctors said that five of the injured were in grave
    condition, so the number of victims could increase.

    Given the scale of the tragedy, the local authorities have decided to
    pay for the burial of all the dead, and declare the day of the
    funerals a day of mourning in the Komi Republic. However, no date has
    been set; many of bodies were badly burned, so it will take some time
    to identify them.

    Ex-convicts Suspected

    As is usual in these cases, several theories as to the cause of the
    fire were considered at the very start of the investigation.
    According to one of them, the fire started due to the spontaneous
    explosion of a gas cylinder. It is known that several days before the
    fire, there had been minor repair work done at Passazh using gas
    welding and the builders had left a full 40-l propane cylinder under
    a first-floor staircase. Since the fire broke out in that exact
    place, the gas cylinder theory advanced by the Ministry of Emergency
    Situations was the leading one in the first few hours, but it soon
    had to be abandoned.

    As the specialists said, the gas cylinder explosion was an effect,
    but not a cause, of the fire. The fire was caused by arson. Witnesses
    told investigators from the prosecutor's office that they had seen
    two young men, possibly even teenagers, rushing from the building a
    second after it burst into flame and taking to their heels. All
    doubts faded after fire engineers had done some work at the site.
    `The specialists' conclusions are still not final,' Ukhta's
    prosecutor, Nikolai Sanaev, told Kommersant. `But they have
    tentatively established that the fire started on the first floor
    under the up staircase, that is, about in the middle of the corridor.
    The ignition source was some kind of volatile liquid - traces of it
    were discovered in the ashes - but further examinations will be
    needed to determine the exact composition and quantity of this
    liquid.'

    The arsonists have so far not been arrested; therefore, it is still
    premature to speak of their motives. However, local investigators are
    convinced that the teenagers were recruited for the crime by a local
    organized crime group of ex-convicts, or `blues', the name given here
    to the heavily tattooed [hence the name `blues'] professional
    criminals who have served their sentences in the Komi Republic and
    have stayed on after doing their time. There are a lot of these
    people in the North, but the blues don't always occupy a niche worthy
    of their `authority' in local business - Caucasians get in the way.

    Ukhta is becoming more and more like other big cities,' an officer
    with the local criminal investigation department told Kommersant.
    `Azerbaijanis here run the produce business - both wholesale and
    retail - Armenians deal in manufactured goods, and Dagestanis run the
    transport business. There's nothing left for our local convicts to do
    but pick pockets the old fashioned way, so they're against anyone who
    tramples on their business. This is what causes all the problems.'

    However, not everyone in Ukhta agrees with this. `Local businessman
    Vladimir Gevorkian and his son Georgy own Passazh, along with their
    partners, Vladimir Gusev and Aleksey Vladimirov,' Viktor Zhuravelev,
    the head of the city administration's department of consumer markets
    and trade, told Kommersant. `They recently leased the shopping center
    to OOO Severtorg, which sublet the space to small businesses. All of
    these deals are absolutely legal, and all of those involved in them
    are respectable people and serious, diversified businessmen, not
    criminals. There have never been any criminal or interethnic
    confrontations in city business. Therefore, I'm convinced it wasn't
    arson; the blaze was caused accidentally by careless use of fire.'

    When the Kommersant correspondent asked Zhuravelev to put him in
    touch with the owners of Passazh, he said it was impossible, because
    Gevorkian was out of the republic and his partners were being
    questioned at the prosecutor's office.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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