News
Russia: Huge Fire Engulfs Shopping Mall
A huge fire has ripped through a major shopping complex on the edge of Moscow killing at least one person, Russia’s Emergencies Ministry has said.
Eko Hot Blog reports that Video of the blaze showed explosions at the massive Mega Khimki mall.
EDITOR’S PICKS
-
Colombia: Landslide Kills 3, Buries Several People
-
Leaders Of South Africa’s Governing Party Sit To Decide Cyril Ramaphosa’s Fate
-
Explosions Allegedly Hit Two Military Airfields In Russia
Arson is being investigated as a possible cause of the fire, but an electrical fault is thought to be a more likely trigger.
The mall had housed major Western retail outlets, until they pulled out after February’s invasion of Ukraine.
The fire spread across the roof of the OBI superstore at the complex early on Thursday morning, and at one point covered 18,000 sq m (194,000 sq ft).
By around 08:30 Moscow time (05:30 GMT) firefighters quoted by Russian media said it had been contained to an area of 7,000 sq m.
Two hours later, an Emergencies Ministry official said what he described as the “open fire” had been put out.
At least one explosion at OBI, which sells home and garden improvement wares, caused the structure to start collapsing, firefighters said.
The blasts are thought to have been caused by exploding aerosols and paint tins.
Russia’s Investigative Committee has opened a criminal case into the incident. Losses from the fire have been estimated at $320-480m (£261m-390m).
The German hardware chain OBI no longer owns the store, having sold all its Russian outlets – including 27 superstores – over the summer.
FURTHER READING
-
Goblin Mode’ Revealed As Oxford Word Of The Year 2022
-
Russia: Bodies Of 2,500 Seals Found Along Caspian Sea Coast
-
Taiwan: The Battle Against Mobile Phone Fraud
A 60% stake was bought by Russian-born German-Israeli businessman Josef Liokumovich for just $10 (£8).
Source: BBC
Click here to watch video of the week:
Advertise or Publish a Story on EkoHot Blog:
Kindly contact us at [email protected]. Breaking stories should be sent to the above email and substantiated with pictorial evidence.
Citizen journalists will receive a token as data incentive.
Call or Whatsapp: 0803 561 7233, 0703 414 5611