A fire swept through a retirement home for poor people early Tuesday,
killing 16 elderly residents at the facility outside the northern
border city of Mexicali, the mayor's office said.
Five other residents were reported in serious condition after being
taken to a hospital in nearby Mexicali, which sits across the border
from Calexico, California.
Mayor Jaime Diaz Ochoa said the cause of the blaze at the Hermoso
Atardecer (Beautiful Sunset) retirement home was being investigated by
the state prosecutors' office. The mayor's office said that 12 fire
extinguishers and eight smoke detectors had been found at the home and
that the nonprofit facility in a rural area about a half-hour drive from
Mexicali had not been overcrowded.
Diaz Ochoa said 23 residents had been taken to a temporary city
shelter and would be referred to a city elderly care center. He said
most were apparently over 75 years old. The nursing home housed poor,
abandoned or formerly homeless elderly people.
Telephone numbers listed for the home rang unanswered or were disconnected.
Diaz Ochoa said the facility was run by the nonprofit Cultural Society for the Promotion of Social Welfare.
In its government registration page, the group lists one of its
functions as "giving humanitarian assistance to low-income elderly
people in need, including food, shelter, clothing and medical care."
Susana Marisol Tapia, a former volunteer at the home, said the
administrators "do a great job, with a lot of dedication and sacrifice."
"What has happened is a tragedy that will surely hurt the beautiful
work that they do, and that's a shame," Tapia wrote in an email upon
hearing of the fire.
AP
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