Dec 28, 2008 11:46 am US/Eastern
Explosive House Fire Kills 7 In Philadelphia
4 Other People Manage To Escape Burning Home
Officials Blame Kerosene Heater On Deadly Blaze
PHILADELPHIA (AP) ―
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A firefighter comforts a survivor of a house fire on Dec. 27, 2008, in Philadelphia, Pa.
AP
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Officials in Philadelphia say 7 people were killed on Dec. 26, 2008, when a kerosene heater exploded, setting a home on fire.
CBS
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Firefighters gather at the scene of a house fire in southwest Philadelphia on Dec. 27, 2008, apparently caused by an exploding kerosene heater that killed seven people, most of whom were found huddled together in the basement, a firefighters said.
Joseph Kaczmarek/AP
Dozens of Liberian immigrants gathered Saturday at the
site of a devastating house fire where they said seven members of their
community died after an accident with a kerosene heater.
Authorities have not
yet released the names of the victims, but fire survivor Harris Murphy said
those trapped in the basement blaze were, like him, part of the large Liberian
enclave in southwest Philadelphia.
The blaze broke out
around 10:45 p.m. Friday in a three-story brick duplex, killing two men, a
woman, a teenage girl, a 1-year-old boy and two other children, a girl and a
boy, fire department spokesman Chief Daniel Williams said.
The 1-year-old was
cradled in the arms of one of the victims, fire Commissioner Lloyd Ayers said.
The boy was later pronounced dead at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
The medical examiner
identified one adult and three children, and said the children died of smoke
inhalation, while the adult died of smoke inhalation and burns. The four were
identified as Henry W. Gbokoloi, 54, of Yeadon; 8-year-old Ramere Markese Wright-Dosso,
6-year-old Mariam Iyanya Dosso, and 1-year-old Zyhire Xzavier Wright-Teah, all
from the same home on Willows Ave.
in Southwest Philadelphia.
The other victims still had
not been identified.
Four people survived the fire
including Murphy, 35, who lives
down the street but was watching a movie with others at the
home when the flames erupted.
Fire marshals have not
yet released the cause of the blaze. But Murphy said it started after a woman
added fuel to a kerosene heater and, when it became too hot, tried to move it
outside through the basement's only door.
Some of the flaming
liquid spilled out and set the carpet on fire, and several people in the room
tried to stamp out the flames, Murphy said.
The heater then
"exploded," he said.
Murphy said he ran into a
basement bathroom with another man and some children, got in the tub and turned
on the shower to try to wait out the flames until firefighters arrived. After a
few moments, he said he decided to make a break for it because the smoke was
growing thick.
The whole basement was
engulfed in fire and "I just ran through it," he said.
A preliminary
investigation showed the basement had one exit to the exterior and that the
interior basement stairs had been removed, the fire department said in a
statement.
After making it out,
Murphy called authorities and told them there were children trapped in the
shower. He was expecting that they would be found alive, but learned hours
later that seven people had perished. One victim was his best friend of 25
years, Murphy said.
Some Liberians who came
to the house Saturday morning did not know who died but, because of the home's
location, feared they would know one or more of the victims. The neighborhood
is home to many of the city's 15,000 Liberian immigrants.
The names of the dead
-- and the survivors -- quickly spread through cell phone calls and
word-of-mouth after Murphy and victims' relatives arrived at the site.
Anthony Kesselly,
president of the Union of Liberian Associations in the Americas, lives
nearby and said he knew one victim very well. He came to the house as soon as
he heard the news Saturday morning and was not surprised to see the growing
crowd.
"We are very close-knit
people," Kesselly said. Murphy, who moved from Liberia
to the U.S.
in 1996, said "it was a miracle of God" that he escaped. He had large
bandages on his head and right hand, and suffered visible burns and blisters on
his nose, ears and left hand.
Fire officials said six
victims were found huddled together in the front of the basement, one of them
cradling the baby. The seventh was found near the basement door.
The fire commissioner
said there were no smoke detectors in the house.
(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
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