A National Guard soldier home for the holidays died trying to save people in the deadly Bronx fire
A
National Guard soldier who was home for the holidays died while saving
people from the massive apartment fire in the Bronx borough in New York
City on Thursday night, according to several news reports.
Emmanuel
Mensah, a 28-year-old who immigrated from Ghana five years ago,
returned to his apartment for the first time after joining the Army a
year ago, according to The New York Times.
He was among the 12 people killed in the blaze that consumed an
apartment building near the corner of East 187th Street and Prospect
Avenue.
Mensah
lived with friends of his father — a married couple and their four
children. He got that family out of the burning building safely before
pulling four more people from the fire, said Twum Bredu, his uncle who
lived next door. Witnesses cited in the Times' report say Mensah
disappeared after going back into the building to look for more victims.
"He brought four people out," Bredu told The Times. "When he went to bring a fifth person out, the fire caught up with him."
Mensah is believed to have died of smoke inhalation, authorities said.
Another victim of the #Bronxfire, Emmanuel Mensah, a 28 yr old US Army solider, was home for the holidays. His father told @LSchmidtFox5 he died trying to help others get to safety @fox5ny 5pm pic.twitter.com/dkIL6ylTKF— Stacey Delikat (@StaceyDelikat) December 29, 2017
Mensah had just begun his military career, based on photos which indicate he held the rank of a private first class.
"I
thought maybe he was coming back," said his father, Kwabena Mensah,
according to CBS News.
"Unfortunately, it turns out the other way."
Kwabena, who reportedly searched for his son at nearby hospitals, said he was not surprised by his son's final act.
"That's what I think, because it was in his nature," Kwabena said. "He wanted to help people out."
Four children were among the 12 people who died in the fire, which is suspected
to have occurred a few minutes before 7 p.m., after a 3-year-old boy
played with burners on a stove inside an apartment on the first floor,
New York Fire Department's commissioner, Daniel Nigro, said during a
news conference.
Four people were critically injured from the fire and were "fighting for their lives," Nigro said.
"It seems like a horrible, tragic accident," Mayor Bill de Blasio said in an interview with WNYC radio.
The
fire quickly spread upward in the five-story building. Over 160
firefighters responded to the incident. By 10 p.m., the fire was under
control.
The fire is believed to be New York City's deadliest since a 1990 blaze at a Bronx nightclub that killed 87 people.
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