B.C. tenants evicted for landlord's use after refusing large rent increase to take over neighbouring suite
Ashley Dickey and her mother rented part of the same Coquitlam duplex in three different decades under three different landlords.
Sorrow welled across a Bronx community Monday, a day after a fire and choking smoke engulfed a high-rise apartment building and claimed the lives of 17 people, eight of them children.
As survivors recalled the frantic chaos of their escape, bereft family and friends of those who perished coped with shock, disbelief and pain.
"Some people don't even know that their loved ones are gone," said Fathia Touray, speaking to The Associated Press from her home in the United Arab Emirates. Her mother and siblings lived on the building's third floor, where the fire started. One sister was rushed to a hospital, but is now in stable condition. The rest of her immediate family escaped.
Mayor Eric Adams said Monday morning that several people were still in critical condition after a malfunctioning space heater sparked the city's deadliest fire in three decades.
Renee Howard, 68, became emotional as she spoke about the lives lost.
"I've never experienced such devastation. My neighbors died, children died -- I don't understand, I don't understand," she said as she broke into sobs.
"I don't remember all their names right now," she said, before rattling off a few, including one boy who she described as having "such beautiful angelic eyes."
All those lives, she said, were "snatched away in a second."
She joined other residents, surviving family and strangers alike in prayer Monday to console the grieving.
At Masjid-ur-Rahmah, a mosque just a few blocks from the apartment building, more than two dozen people came together in solidarity. Many of those who pray at the mosque live in the building.
About a dozen women wept inside the mosque, mourning the loss of three young children in the fire. Members of the congregation weren't sure about whether the children's parents' survived, and many family members feared the worst.
"To God we belong and to God we return," said the mosque's imam, Musa Kabba, who urged congregants to be patient while awaiting news about loved ones.
Many who lived at the apartment complex had formed a close-knit community, and soon word spread about who might have died amid the smoke and fire.
"I'm so sorry for the people that lost their children and their mothers because we all are one. And for this to happen, it's horrible," said Tysena Jacobs, a building resident.
Mahamadou Toure struggled to find the words outside a hospital emergency room, hours after the fire took the life of his 5-year-old daughter and her teenage brother.
"Right now my heart is very …," Toure tried to tell the Daily News, before composing himself.
"It's OK. I give it to God," he continued.
Neighborhood residents, Johanna Bellevue among them, donated clothes and other necessities to survivors.
"Baby clothes, baby food, books, jackets, sneakers, whatever I can," Bellevue said. "I can't do much but what I have."
At an assistance center set up at Monroe College, Stefan Beauvogui and his wife went through rooms of clothes and household goods.
Beauvogui has lived in the building for about seven years, he said. He and his wife were in their apartment on the 4th floor along with their 6- and 9-year-old sons when his wife smelled smoke Sunday morning, he said.
His family were waiting Monday to be let back into their apartment to see the extent of damage.
Meanwhile, The Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City launched a relief fund to aid displaced residents.
"The city stands ready to give impacted families all the support they need," Adams said.
Many of those displaced were immigrants from the West African nation of Gambia.
"This is a very close-knit community," said Touray, who lived in the building herself for many years and has kept close contact with family and friends in the United States despite moving to the United Arab Emirates.
Her family moved to the building nearly four decades ago. Soon, others from Gambia, some from the same village as her own, would arrive. Over the years, they formed a community in one enclave of the Bronx.
"These are working class, first-generation immigrant families surviving," she said, "and just trying to thrive in the U.S."
"We've lost a lot of close family friends," said Touray, who said she expected to fly back to the United States to be with family.
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Associated Press writers David Porter and Deepti Hajela and news researcher Rhonda Shafner contributed to this story.
Ashley Dickey and her mother rented part of the same Coquitlam duplex in three different decades under three different landlords.
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