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Fire Rips Through Paris Apartments Killing 17

Posted on: Saturday, 27 August 2005, 09:00 CDT

Fire raced through a crowded Paris apartment building housing African immigrants yesterday, trapping residents in their sleep and killing 17 people - most of them children, police said.

Between 8 and 14 of the victims were children. A definitive count could not be immediately established because of the condition of the burned bodies.

Firefighters said 30 other people were injured, two seriously.

Many of the victims were from the west African nation of Mali. Others were from Senegal, Ghana and Tunisia, according to local residents.

"It's an extremely heavy toll," said Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy who visited the scene of the blaze in south-east Paris.

"We just saw the bodies of seven children who were asphyxiated. It's an abominable spectacle," Sarkozy said.

The district mayor, Serge Blisko, said the dead had "visibly, died in their sleep, asphyxiated and not burned".

One resident of the seven-storey building, situated on the corner of a major boulevard, described being awakened by cries from children and adults, then rushing to his window on the building's second floor.

People "jumped out the windows. They didn't care about dying," said 71-year-old Oumar Cisse, originally from Mali.

The fire broke out shortly after midnight in the stairwell of the building, said Capt. Jacques Dauvergne, spokesman for the firefighters.

About 210 firefighters worked for an hour-and-a-half to bring the blaze under control. It was extinguished after burning through the upper floors of the building for three hours, Dauvergne said.

Portions of the facade of the large white building on a corner of a major boulevard in the city's 13th district were scorched from the smoke, but the building was intact. Window boxes with flowers abloom that fell from balconies were strewn on the pavement below.

About 100 children and 30 adults lived in the building, which was run by a humanitarian association that helps needy people, according to Cisse who has lived in the building for 15 years.

He said the building was ina decrepit state, infested with rats and mice. Walls were cracked and lead was in the paint that covered them, he claimed. Electricity bills were "exorbitant" for some residents, he added, suggesting that the wiring could be faulty.

"It was totally unfit," Cisse said.

Blisko, the district mayor, said the building was "overcrowded," particularly with children.

"They talk about three-room apartments with 12 people," Blisko said. "When you have this type of fire and people are sleeping, you can be sure the toll will be high."

Sory Cassama, who lived in the building with his wife and 12 children, said he was asleep when a daughter knocked on the door. Their living room had filled with smoke.

"There was so much smoke in the stairwell, but we were still able to get out," said Cassama, who said his wife was in hospital with smoke inhalation.

The state-owned building was run by the humanitarian organisation Emmaus and was under the direct care of a linked association France- Euro Habitat, according to local officials and building residents.

"We have enormous difficulty housing the disadvantaged," said Blisko.

It was the second major Paris fire this year In April, 24 people were killed in a hotel blaze in the French capital - many of them children. Most were African immigrants and other people without means who were lodged there by authorities.

In that fire, officials said a night watchman's girlfriend may have accidentally triggered the blaze by placing candles on the floor to set the scene for a romantic tryst, but then leaving in a rage because he was drunk


Source: Birmingham Post; Birmingham (UK)

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