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7-year-old girl becomes 10th victim of NYC fire

Cab driver loses every member of immediate family in 3-alarm Bronx blaze

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This photo released by the New York City Fire Department shows one of the burned floors at 1022 Woodycrest Ave., the building where nine children and an adult died Thursday in the city's deadliest fire since 1990 in the Bronx neighborhood of New York.
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updated 2:20 p.m. ET March 10, 2007

NEW YORK - A 7-year-old girl died after a two-day battle for her life, becoming the 10th victim of a devastating fire that claimed the lives of eight other children and one adult, a family spokesman said Saturday.

Asimi Soumare became the fourth child in her family to die in the blaze that also killed her mother, said a family spokesman, Sheikh Moussa Drammeh. Mamadou Soumare, a cabbie who received a frantic call from his doomed wife Fatoumata on the night of the fire, has now lost his spouse and all of their children.

Word of the Friday night fatality at Lincoln Hospital came just two days before Monday’s funeral of the other nine victims of the blaze—three of Asimi’s siblings, her mother and five cousins. The other five children belonged to the Magassa family, which shared the three-story brick home with the Soumares.

The girl’s death was attributed to complications due to smoke inhalation, said Ellen Borakove, spokeswoman for the city medical examiner. The blaze was New York City’s deadliest since 1990’s Happy Land fire that killed 87 people in the Bronx.

‘I wanted to help them’
One of Moussa Magassa’s surviving children told the New York Post that he escaped the fire by jumping out a window, but he was unable to offer any assistance to those trapped inside the home.

“I wanted to help them, but there was too much smoke. I didn’t know if they were out already,” the 15-year-old said in an account reported Saturday.

His father flew home Friday to tragedy, but also to emotional and financial support from a closely knit community of Malian immigrants. Many turned out for a prayer service Friday and collected more than $21,000 to help the families, said Cheick Sidi Diarra, Mali’s ambassador to the United Nations.

A taxi driver group was also collecting donations, and New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner volunteered to cover the cost of the funerals. The blaze occurred just blocks from Yankee Stadium.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the city had also offered financial and other assistance to the families. Magassa and Mamadou Soumare met with Bloomberg and Abdoulaye Diop, Mali’s ambassador to the United States, for the prayer service Friday.

‘A great American tragedy’
Like many immigrants, Magassa and Soumare “came to the United States to pursue the great American dream,” Bloomberg said after their meeting. “And (they) now find themselves sharing a great American tragedy with us.”

A funeral for all nine victims was set for Monday in the Bronx. The five victims from the Magassa family will be buried in New Jersey on Monday, while the Soumares will be flown to Mali for burial.


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