University of Dar es Salaam students ponder their next move after fire broke out yesterday at Mabibo Hostel in the city. A building housing about 400 students was seriously damaged during the morning blaze, which also injured two people. About 400 students of the University of Dar es Salaam who reside at Mabibo hostel have no place to stay after a fire destroyed a section of the hostel yesterday.
The university management asked the students to vacate block B and A of the hostel to pave the way for investigations.
Two students were injured during the incident, including one who jumped from the second floor to save her life. They were admitted at Muhimbili National Hospital.
The fire, whose cause could not be immedidately known, burned a store where mattresses were stored and spread to five adjacent cubicles which were completely destroyed.
Briefing journalists at the scene, the varsity's Vice Chancellor, Prof Rwekaza Mukandala, said primary observations have ascertained that the burnt building was not safe for residential purposes after it had developed a huge crack. The fire only heightened the decision to move them out.
"We order that all students residing in this wing be vacated and be given another place for accommodation while the building is being renovated," said Prof Mukandala.
He said victims whose belongings were lost in the fire or stolen during the rescue mission would get support from the university. The fire is reported to have started on the second floor of the three-storey block at around 8.30 am. Students claimed an electric problem may have sparked the fire, adding that the building had experienced a flactualtion of electric supply in the recent past. Fire fighters from Ilala arrived when students had managed to put out the fire using water buckets. They fetched water from the ground floor.
Fear and confusion engulfed the occupants who are females, as most of them ran to save their lives, and a few ran after their belongings. As a result one student was said to have jumped from the second floor through the window.
Ms Atuganile Mwambusye a third year student is among those whose rooms caught fire and she lost all of her properties.
"I was still in bed when I heard people shouting in the corridor. When I came out there was a cloud of huge smoke such that we could not see properly, but I noticed that the fire came from a store room where bed mats are kept, just next to my room."