Sri Lanka nursing home worker says a ‘chained’ patient was among 13 fire victims
GALPATHA, Sri Lanka (AP) — One of the residents killed in a fire at an unregistered nursing home in western Sri Lanka had been chained, while another was untied and saved, a member of staff said on Friday.
“There were two who were chained,” said nursing home worker Danuja Chathuranga. “You only have to take your eyes away for one moment, they run away. One of them had gone one day with the chair he was tied (to) and was found entangled in a barbed wire fence. Another with sores in (their) legs was brought back from a muddy field.”
“Our intention was not to harm them. They were patients taking psychiatric treatment. If they run away or fall into a pit, well or get run over by a vehicle, we have to take that responsibility,” he added.
His comments came amid growing public outrage over the treatment allegedly meted out to the residents at the home in in Anguruwatota where 13 people are now known to have died in the blaze which started late Wednesday.
The nursing home for people with mental health conditions lay abandoned on Friday. Glasses cases, medicines and reclining chairs lay strewn around the burned-out shell in the small town about 55 kilometers (34 miles) southeast of the capital, Colombo.
The surviving residents have been moved to a nearby nursing home.
Video footage by The Associated Press showed the building gutted with its charred furniture and equipment. Bodies lay nearby.
Local television channels showed image of firefighters, police and residents trying to contain the raging fire. Police and soldiers put those rescued on buses to be taken to a safe location.
According to police, 71 people were staying at the home at the time of the fire, of which 50 were rescued by neighbors, firefighters and police. Seven other remain in hospital.
Chathuranga said it is thought the fire was caused by an electric short circuit in a wiring attached to a water pump.
“The fire initially caught a pile of mattresses and pillows and then quickly spread across the house,” he said, adding that the majority of the residents were rescued, but 10 people were caught in the fire and burned to death. Three others have since died in hospital.
The director of the home has been arrested on suspicion of causing deaths through negligence. He appeared before a court on Thursday and was ordered to be detained for a week pending an investigation.
Chathura Mihudum, director of Sri Lanka's National Secretariat for Elders, said the facility was not registered as a nursing home and had been warned to follow laws and guidelines. He said it was overcrowded, with enough beds for about 15 people in a space where 71 people were living.
Government officials had previously visited the institution and had instructed the management to follow laws, he said, without elaborating.
Amala Rajapaksa, an administrator at the nursing home, said the institution was in the process of being registered as requested by government officials.
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