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Blaze at Cairo telecommunications building kills 4, disrupts internet, phone

Blaze at Cairo telecommunications building kills 4, disrupts internet, phone

Firefighters work to extinguish a fire that erupted in a telecommunications building in the Ramses district of downtown Cairo, Egypt, on Jul 7, 2025. (Photo: REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh)

08 Jul 2025 04:38PM

CAIRO: Four workers were killed and at least 22 others were injured in a fire that broke out on Monday (Jul 7) at a key data centre in Cairo, Hossam Abdel Ghaffar, the spokesperson at Egypt's Health Ministry, told Reuters on Tuesday.

The blaze at a Telecom Egypt facility, which state TV said was contained on Monday, caused disruptions to communications across the capital.

Egypt's Minister of Communications and Information Technology, Amr Talaat, said in a statement on Tuesday that services will be gradually restored within 24 hours.

In a statement on Tuesday, Telecom Egypt said it mourned the employees that lost their lives and offered support for their families.

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Firefighters battle flames after a fire broke out in a telecommunications building in central Cairo, on Jul 7, 2025. (Photo: AP/Ahmed Hatem)

The fire halted phone calls, and disrupted internet access, with internet monitoring group Netblocks saying network data showed national connectivity at 62 per cent of ordinary levels.

The health ministry posted alternative numbers for ambulance services across different governorates in case people were unable to reach its main hotline.

Besides phone calls, some digital banking services were also impacted including credit cards, ATM machines and online transactions, a bank source and residents said on Monday. Banks had already been closed for the day.

The injuries were mostly because of smoke inhalation, health ministry spokesperson Ghaffar said on Monday.

The state news agency MENA said on Monday the fire had been prevented from spreading to the entire building and neighbouring rooftops.

An initial examination indicated that the fire was likely to have been caused by an electrical short circuit, MENA cited a security source as saying.

Source: Reuters/ec
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