61 killed in Deadly Inferno in Al-Kut, Iraq, dozens still missing | WATCH
In a country scarred by war, it wasn’t a bomb that killed 61 people, it was a building left unprotected against fire.

A catastrophic fire engulfed the newly opened Corniche Hypermarket Mall, a five-story commercial center in Al-Kut, a city 100 miles southeast of Baghdad, late Wednesday night, July 16, 2025, claiming at least 61 lives, Iraq’s Interior Ministry reported. The blaze, which erupted in a building housing a hypermarket, restaurant, and supermarket, left many victims suffocated by dense smoke, particularly those who sought refuge in bathrooms. Civil defense teams rescued over 45 people trapped inside, but 11 remain missing, with some bodies still buried under debris.
The mall, operational for only five days, was filled with families shopping and dining when the fire broke out. Ambulances transported casualties to hospitals until 4 a.m., with 14 bodies charred beyond recognition and one too severely burned for immediate identification. A survivor told Agence France-Presse that an air conditioner explosion on the first or second floor may have triggered the blaze, though the cause remains unconfirmed.
Wasit province Gov. Mohammed Jameel al-Mayahi, who personally supervised rescue operations, called the incident a “tragedy and calamity” and declared three days of mourning. He vowed to release preliminary investigation findings within 48 hours and announced lawsuits against the mall’s owner and building contractor. The Iraqi Interior Ministry is focused on recovering remaining bodies and determining the fire’s origin.
Iraq’s history of deadly fires, including a 2021 hospital blaze that killed over 60 and a 2023 wedding hall fire that claimed more than 100 lives, underscores persistent safety challenges. Lax construction standards, compounded by decades of conflict and infrastructure decay, have fueled such tragedies, often worsened by high summer temperatures reaching 50°C (122°F).