Fourteen people have died in a fire at a hospital treating coronavirus patients in North Macedonia, authorities said on Thursday.
The fire broke out late on Wednesday following an explosion in a COVID-19 clinic in Tetovo in the northwest of the Balkan country, said Prime Minister Zoran Zaev, who immediately headed to the town.
“A huge tragedy has occurred in the Tetovo COVID-19 centre,” Zaev said on Twitter overnight. “An explosion caused a fire. The fire was extinguished but many lives were lost.”
At least 14 people died in the disaster, the prosecutor’s office later said in a statement, raising the toll from the 10 deaths confirmed overnight.
“Prosecutors have ordered autopsies to identify the bodies of the 14 people who died in the fire and we are looking into whether there are others dead,” the statement said.
Health Minister Venko Filipce had earlier expressed “profound condolences” to the victims’ families on Twitter.
The fire broke out as the former Yugoslav republic celebrated the 30th anniversary of its independence, with festivities in the capital Skopje, including a military parade.
The blaze destroyed part of the modular units recently built in front of the hospital to accommodate COVID patients.
Several hours after the disaster, people walked past charred containers while stretcher-bearers went back and forth to rescue vehicles.
Investigators have gone to the site to try to determine the cause of the disaster.
Fire services were alerted to the blaze at around 1900 GMT, and it took about 45 minutes to extinguish.
Construction work on the modular COVID unit only began in December at the hospital in Tetovo, a town of around 50,000 people.
“The fire was huge because the hospital is modular, there was plastic,” Tetovo deputy fire chief Saso Trajcevski told local television.
“We took out victims while we put out the flames.”
Several injured people were transported to hospitals in the capital.
“The fight for life is still going on and all services are doing everything they can to save people,” Zaev said earlier, expressing “deep condolences to the families and of the deceased.”