The weekend school dormitory blaze that killed 19 minors in central Guyana is believed to have been started by a disgruntled pupil angry at having her mobile phone confiscated, a government source told reporters on Tuesday.
Sunday’s inferno gutted the building in the regional capital of Mahdia, which housed girls aged 11, 12, 16 and 17. Some are still hospitalized.
An official police report said that “a female student is suspected of having set the devastating fire because her cell phone was taken away.”
Photo: Reuters
The government source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that the teenage pupil in question had admitted to the arson attack and was under police guard at the district hospital in Mahdia.
Police are seeking advice on whether to charge her, the official said.
On Monday, Guyana Police Commissioner Clifton Hicken had already said that investigators believed the fire was “maliciously set.”
According to the government source, students are not allowed to have phones in the dormitory.
After the staff took away the girl’s phone, she “threatened the same night that she will burn down the building and everybody heard her,” the government source said.
The official said that minutes later the girl went to the bathroom area and sprayed insecticide on a curtain before lighting a match.
Several pupils had recounted the same version of events, the official said.
The girls were locked in for the night and a house mistress told police that in her panic she could not find the key to the front door.
The building had metal bars on the windows preventing pupils from escaping through them.
The house mistress “locks up every night at nine o’clock to ensure the girls don’t get away from the building,” the official said.
“According to the female students, they were asleep and were awakened by screams,” the police report said.
Despite efforts by other students to extinguish the blaze, the official said the fire quickly swept through the wooden ceiling and eventually engulfed the entire building.
Some pupils, including the girl who allegedly started the fire, escaped when some men broke down a door.
“Upon checking, they saw fire/smoke in the bathroom area, which quickly spread in the building, causing several students to receive burns to their bodies and smoke inhalation, while several managed to escape,” the police report said.
The police report said there were 57 pupils in the dormitory, which was “a one-flat [story] concrete building measuring about 100 feet by 40 feet [30.5m by 12m], with several windows, all grilled, and five doors.”
Firefighters did not arrive on the scene until 25 minutes after the fire took hold.
The house mistress’ son apparently also died in the fire.
Thirteen young girls and the boy died in the building, while five more pupils died later at the hospital.
As well as the dead, about 20 children were taken to hospital.
Seven remained hospitalized, with two in critical condition, a hospital source said.
Six autopsies performed so far revealed that the minors died from smoke inhalation and burns, police said.
The other 13 unrecognizable bodies were being transported to the capital, Georgetown, for DNA testing to confirm their identities.
National security adviser Gerry Gouveia said that a forensic team from Barbados had arrived in Guyana to help with the identification.
Another team from the US was expected.
Guyanese President Irfaan Ali said that Cuba also offered to provide medical support.
RARE EVENT: While some cultures have a negative view of eclipses, others see them as a chance to show how people can work together, a scientist said Stargazers across a swathe of the world marveled at a dramatic red “Blood Moon” during a rare total lunar eclipse in the early hours of yesterday morning. The celestial spectacle was visible in the Americas and Pacific and Atlantic oceans, as well as in the westernmost parts of Europe and Africa. The phenomenon happens when the sun, Earth and moon line up, causing our planet to cast a giant shadow across its satellite. But as the Earth’s shadow crept across the moon, it did not entirely blot out its white glow — instead the moon glowed a reddish color. This is because the
DEBT BREAK: Friedrich Merz has vowed to do ‘whatever it takes’ to free up more money for defense and infrastructure at a time of growing geopolitical uncertainty Germany’s likely next leader Friedrich Merz was set yesterday to defend his unprecedented plans to massively ramp up defense and infrastructure spending in the Bundestag as lawmakers begin debating the proposals. Merz unveiled the plans last week, vowing his center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU)/Christian Social Union (CSU) bloc and the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD) — in talks to form a coalition after last month’s elections — would quickly push them through before the end of the current legislature. Fraying Europe-US ties under US President Donald Trump have fueled calls for Germany, long dependent on the US security umbrella, to quickly
Romania’s electoral commission on Saturday excluded a second far-right hopeful, Diana Sosoaca, from May’s presidential election, amid rising tension in the run-up to the May rerun of the poll. Earlier this month, Romania’s Central Electoral Bureau barred Calin Georgescu, an independent who was polling at about 40 percent ahead of the rerun election. Georgescu, a fierce EU and NATO critic, shot to prominence in November last year when he unexpectedly topped a first round of presidential voting. However, Romania’s constitutional court annulled the election after claims of Russian interference and a “massive” social media promotion in his favor. On Saturday, an electoral commission statement
Chinese authorities increased pressure on CK Hutchison Holdings Ltd over its plan to sell its Panama ports stake by sharing a second newspaper commentary attacking the deal. The Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office on Saturday reposted a commentary originally published in Ta Kung Pao, saying the planned sale of the ports by the Hong Kong company had triggered deep concerns among Chinese people and questioned whether the deal was harming China and aiding evil. “Why were so many important ports transferred to ill-intentioned US forces so easily? What kind of political calculations are hidden in the so-called commercial behavior on the