The way I see it, poor design and poor practices kill, deadly combo. Remember a news story about a guy who had purchased a cheap noname scooter and let it charge overnight (DON'T DO THIS!!!!!!). The thing bursted into flames first and then exploded, launching parts of the batteries, on fire, over couches, beds, rags, clothes, furniture... everything was in flames in a matter of seconds. All 5 inhabitants of the apartment died either by fire or by smoke, and the flames engulfed the hallway and other 2 apartments as well -one was empty and the other evacuated when they heard the explosion- so yeah they tend to create a mess.
I deal with bare cells for several gadgets and always monitor charging and temperature, since my chargers are dumb there's no cutoff when the cell reaches 100% so if I'm not there to take it out it'll probably overheat and go boom.
"ONLY"? Not even! Exploding Li-ion batteries has been a genuine problem for years!!!! By percentage, the odds of this happening are very low. But by the numbers, because there are 100s and 100s of millions (billions?) of these batteries out there, it happens a lot. Note
this article from 2015.
Where I live there's little to no knowledge on how dangerous electricity and electric appliances can be if mixed with negligence and/or ignorance, if you ask me I'll always tell you to
never leave anything with batteries plugged overnight when you're not aware,
always have a proper fire extinguisher at home (somehow this isn't a requirement for landlords yet here), and the usual... don't buy garbage noname products. #1 reason for house fires is still faulty electrical products, from dangerous cheap extension cords that aren't rated for anything over 1 amp to heaters, microwave ovens, phone chargers, fake laptop power supplies (have a few of em), even faulty switches due to the use of low quality wiring and conduits.