The Zimnyaya Vishnya shopping centre in Prospekt Lenina Street hit by fire; several people and at least 56 people have been killed in the fire. Photo / Getty Images
Dozens of children are missing and feared dead after 56 people died when a fire sparked at a trampoline park engulfed a Siberian shopping centre.
Scores are dead in the blaze that broke out at the "Winter Cherry" building in Kemerovo, Siberia on Sunday.
Adults and children were seen jumping from windows from several storeys up or throwing themselves down escalators as they desperately tried to escape the flames, the Daily Mail reports.
The fire is believed to have started in a foam-filled play area inside the building 'went up like gunpowder' before igniting a number of bouncy castles.
The latest death toll from the Kemerovo inferno in Siberia is 56 with 47 injured and many still unaccounted for.
Pictures emerged of the missing children with little hope that any will be found alive in the carnage of the shopping centre as firefighters struggled to reach the worst-hit areas.
A video showed the panic at the start of the tragedy with parents screaming for their children and others shouting 'fire, fire'. Another highlighted fire doors locked and people unable to escape.
An 11 year old boy Sergei Moskalenko is in a coma after jumping from a blazing window - a fall seen on video as he hit an awning - and it was confirmed this morning that his parents died in the fire.
The fire was still burning this morning - and the structure in danger of collapse - preventing rescuers and firefighters reaching a badly hit cinema where many children had been watching a film.
One girl, Maria Moroz, 13, messaged from the cinema: "We are on fire…."
A relative replied then she said: "Looks like this is farewell from me."
She is feared dead.
Among the missing are eight girls from one class in Treschevsky village - all 11 or 12 years old - named as: Viktoria Pochankina, Veronika Ponushkova, Elena Chernikova, Tatiana Kurchevskaya, Sergey Maneshkin, Viktoria Zipunova, Anastasia Smirnova, Diana Nizovskaya.
In a heartrending final phone call Viktoria 'Vika' Pochankina told her aunt: "Everything is burning.
"The doors are blocked. I can't go out, I can't breath."
Her aunt Evgenia said: "I told her: 'Vika, take off your clothes, cover your nose".
She told me: "Auntie, tell all my family I love them.
One security guard said lighted candles were on a table in the play area for a celebration moments before the fire started.
Another said: "People were panicking. The elevators were working.
"Fire alarm did not work at all. There was no water, no fire alarm.
"They came to test it not long ago, I remember. And I know that lifts should have been blocked, but they were working, so it was a total failure.
"All were shouting and running. I went to rescue the children. I was just grabbing them and taking out. I don't know how many, 10, 15, I was just running here and there while it was possible to breath."
Russian emergencies minister Vladimir Puchkov said:
"The fire started from the trampoline room" - a children's zone in the complex,' said deputy governor Vladimir Chernov.
"The preliminary theory is that one of the children had a cigarette lighter.
"The fire started right in the foamed trampoline pool, which flared up like gunpowder."
Earlier reports from officials had failed to make clear the scale of the tragedy.
The fire will come as a severe blow to Vladimir Putin exactly one week after his landslide election victory.
He is currently facing a mounting diplomatic crisis over the poisoning of ex-spy Sergei Skripal in Salisbury as western countries fall into line behind Britain.
Director of the mall's pet zoo, Evgeny Videman, said he expected all his 200 animals had died.
"I think they were suffocated and died because I was the last to leave. There were no people left in the zoo.
"There was a strong smoke on the third floor, people were panicking on the side stairs.
"I just closed the doors. It was physically impossible to get the animals out.
"I am a vet and I guess that the animals are already choked with smoke."
The Russian Investigative Committee, which probes serious crime, confirmed: "Four children corpses have been found in a children's area during the rescue operations."
Earlier reports said children died from "gas poisoning" in the mall.
Witnesses say there was no fire alarm in the centre.
Eyewitness Alexander Dorogov said: "Two floors went up in smoke in five minutes. The children's play area in the centre was engulfed in smoke in two minutes.
"The smoke was so thick that you couldn't see a stretched out hand. When firefighters came, two people had already jumped out of windows.
"We found some carpet to hold out and catch one of them."
In addition to concerns over gas poisoning, there were fears the burned shopping centre could collapse.