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Dozens Feared Dead in Vietnam Apartment Block Fire

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Dozens of people were feared dead after a fire broke out late Tuesday at a nine-story apartment tower in Hanoi, Vietnam, potentially making it one of the country’s deadliest blazes in well over a decade.

After the fire was extinguished early Wednesday, several state-run news media outlets reported that more than 30 people had died and that more than 100 others had been rescued. Some outlets put the death toll at about 40.

But an official with the city’s emergency services department said by phone late Wednesday afternoon that an official death toll had not yet been finalized. The official Vietnam News Agency reported only that “dozens” of residents had been injured or killed. And other state-run news media outlets appeared to play down the casualty toll, focusing instead on the response from Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh and other officials.

Vietnam is a one-party authoritarian state, and a deadly fire in a residential area of its capital could pose reputational risks for the ruling Communist Party.

The building where the fire broke out had 45 households, and many residents were there when the fire started around 11:30 p.m., the Vietnam News Agency reported. Officials said the cause was under investigation.

The fire broke out two days after President Biden finished a visit to Vietnam, in which he cemented a strategic deal with the country amid shared concerns over China’s mounting ambitions in the region.

The fire in Hanoi’s Thanh Xuan district was hard to fight because the tower sits in a narrow alley, and fire trucks had to park up to about 400 meters, or more than 1,300 feet, away, the state news agency said.

Hanoi is famous for its labyrinthine alleys, many of which snake through neighborhoods where most buildings are French colonial-era structures. The alleys are often big enough for motorcycles but not large trucks.

Last year, an electrical short circuit at a three-story karaoke bar near Ho Chi Minh City in southern Vietnam started a fire that killed 32 people. It was the deadliest fire in the country in a decade and one of several to tear through karaoke bars there in recent years.

Those blazes led to fire inspections and new fire safety regulations, but such reforms are not universally popular. Some in the country’s business community say they are unrealistic and cause construction delays.

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