Ahmed al-Roudaini, a
spokesman for the country's health ministry, said initial findings of an
investigation into the cause of the fire suggested an electrical short circuit
was to blame.
One father, Hussein Omar, a
30-year-old construction worker, said his week-old twins were killed in the
fire.
"I want my baby boy
and girl back. The government must give them back to me," he said, in
tears.
The fire at a hospital in
the Iraqi capital has killed 11 babies, officials have said.
The blaze started late on
Tuesday night inside the maternity wing of the Yarmouk hospital, situated in
western Baghdad.
Burnt incubators stand
outside Yarmouk hospital in Baghdad
Seven other children and 29
women were rescued from the blaze, while reports suggested the babies killed were
born prematurely.
Three other newborns
survived and were treated for smoke inhalation.
The blaze was extinguished
by firefighters and those brought out to safety transferred to other hospitals.
Eshrak Ahmed Jaasar said
she went to the hospital to visit her four-day-old nephew but could not find
him.
"I came early this
morning to see my nephew and his mother, but they told me about the fire,"
she told the Associated Press.
"My nephew is still
missing and his mother was moved to another hospital ward."
She also she was still in
shock but felt very bitter.
"It's a corrupt
government that doesn't care about its citizens and lets this happen," she
said.
Electrical fires are common
in Baghdad - and elsewhere across the country - because of poor maintenance and
wiring.
A lack of fire escapes in
buildings also reportedly contributes to the dangers of a blaze.
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