City
Epaper

Fires kill 57 people in Vietnam in first six months

By IANS | Updated: July 11, 2024 20:30 IST

Hanoi, July 11 A total of 2,222 fires happened in Vietnam in the first six months of this ...

Open in App

Hanoi, July 11 A total of 2,222 fires happened in Vietnam in the first six months of this year, killing 57 people and injuring 45 others, according to the country's Police Department of Fire Prevention, Fighting and Rescue.

The fires caused property losses of some 127.9 billion Vietnamese dong (5.03 million U.S. dollars), local media reported Thursday.

The number of fires and deaths has increased compared to 2023. Majority of the fires were reported at residential areas with 823 cases, said the report, according to Xinhua news agency.

Among the 2,222 fires reported nationwide, 1,299 cases have their causes clarified, mostly due to electrical system failure, or careless use of fire and heat sources.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessIndia Poised to Become Global Air Cargo Hub - ACFI & ASCELA Insights Chart Roadmap for 2030 in its Knowledge Paper

CricketENG vs IND, 3rd Test: KL Rahul Scores His 10th Test Century; Becomes Second Indian with Multiple Tons at Lord’s (Watch Video)

InternationalThousands of Afghans face deportation as US court rejects delay in ending TPS protections

HockeyIndia A defeat France, win third consecutive game on Europe tour

PunePune: Locals Celebrate at Lohagad Fort After UNESCO Declares it as World Heritage Site (Watch Video)

International Realted Stories

InternationalIndia sent a message with Op Sindoor, change in its strategic doctrine will change entire region: Warfare expert John Spencer

InternationalDevotees express joy and reverence as Dalai Lama departs for Ladakh

InternationalKC Venugopal urges PM Modi's immediate intervention in Kerala nurse Nimisha Priya's execution in Yemen

InternationalFighter jet deal with U.S. allies signals regional resistance to China's South China Sea expansion

International"We will revoke their visas and deport them if they don't": U.S. Embassy warns visa holders