The Hamilton Spectator

Survivors stories emerge from deadly Paris fire

- THOMAS ADAMSON AND LORI HINNANT

Paris’s deadliest fire in more than a decade killed at least 10 people Tuesday as flames engulfed a nine-story apartment building, sending residents to the roof and clambering across balconies to escape.

A 40-year-old woman who lived in the building, said to have a history of psychiatri­c problems, was arrested nearby and held on suspicion of having set the fire not long before. French police opened a criminal investigat­ion for voluntary arson resulting in death.

Multiple neighbours said they heard the suspect and her neighbour, an off-duty firefighte­r, arguing over the woman’s music before the fire broke out.

Police responding to the dispute stopped by the woman’s apartment. The firefighte­r and his girlfriend told officers they were leaving to sleep elsewhere in peace and thought the neighbour had lost her mind and one day there would be an accident because of her, according to a police report.

In an interview with Le Parisien newspaper, the 22-year-old firefighte­r said he returned to the building a few minutes later, shortly after midnight, hoping the woman had gone. Instead, he ran into her in the stairwell, which was already beginning to smell of smoke.

“She wished me good luck, telling me that I loved flames,” he said in the interview.

Another resident later told him the woman put paper and wood in front of his apartment door, the firefighte­r told Le Parisien, which did not provide his name.

Survivors described a chaos of smoke and flames, and the young firefighte­r said he ran upstairs to try to evacuate the building. One neighbour recalled clambering out of her eighth-floor apartment and over balconies to reach safety.

“I climbed across several balconies, with nothing beneath, and then was backed into a corner. There were people climbing hand-over-hand to get to where I was and escape the flames,” said a resident identified only as Claire, her eyes wide with shock soon after her rescue.

Another resident, an off-duty police officer, threw on clothes and rang doorbell after doorbell, trying desperatel­y to alert his neighbours.

“I couldn’t save everyone. I can’t forgive myself,” the man identified as Fabrice told France Info radio, adding that smoke and flames prevented him from climbing higher than the fourth floor.

Jacqueline Ravier, who lives on the same street as the apartment building, described seeing a young man blackened by smoke and a woman motionless on the ground.

For hours, she said, flames shot out from the top of the building as smoke-covered victims fled. Shaken residents were brought to her building and the one next door.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner spoke to reporters at the scene Tuesday morning, as plumes of smoke speckled the sky.

“I want to salute the huge mobilizati­on of the Paris firefighte­rs,” he said. “More than 250 people arrived immediatel­y and, throughout the night, saved over 50 people in truly exceptiona­l conditions.”

More than 30 people were being treated for “relatively” light injuries, Castaner said. Among the injured were at least eight firefighte­rs.

It was the deadliest fire in Paris since the April 2005 hotel fire near the famed Opera that killed 24 people.

Authoritie­s suspect the fire resulted from a criminal act, Castaner said. Officials said the suspect had “a history of psychiatri­c problems.”

A judicial official, who spoke on condition of anonymity as an investigat­ion was ongoing, said the woman was drunk when officers detained her.

A police patrol responding to a trash can fire around the same time spotted the woman with her hand in another trash can, according to a second police report. She was staring at the fire trucks streaming toward the building, the document states. The young firefighte­r said he saw her as well.

“She was waiting to see what would happen,” he said in the newspaper interview.

The document says the officers put the woman under brief surveillan­ce and detained her at 12:45 a.m. after she allegedly tied a scarf around a car’s rear-view mirror and raised a cigarette lighter to it. She was undergoing medical tests Tuesday evening.

City fire service spokespers­on Clement Cognon said firefighte­rs were going door-to-door to ensure there are no more victims, and to prevent residual fires.

“The situation was already dramatic when the firefighte­rs arrived,” Cognon said.

Firefighte­rs plucked some people from the roof and balconies, at one point pleading with a man to stay where he was. The fire was extinguish­ed by midmorning.

Emergency workers also sought to shore up the building, which was badly damaged. Images released of the operation released by the fire service showed flames shooting out of windows and stretching across the upper floors.

The building is on rue Erlanger in the 16th arrondisse­ment, one of the calmest and priciest districts of Paris. It is close to the popular Bois de Boulogne park and about a kilometre from the Roland Garros stadium that hosts the French Open tennis tournament and near the Parc des Princes stadium that’s home to Paris Saint-Germain, the country’s top soccer team.

French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted: “France wakes up with emotion after the fire in rue Erlanger in Paris last night.”

 ?? BENOIT MOSER BRIGADE DE SAPEURS-POMPIERS DE PARIS ?? A fire rages through the top floors of an apartment building in Paris, France. The Paris fire service says seven people have been killed and at least 28 injured in a fire in a residentia­l building.
BENOIT MOSER BRIGADE DE SAPEURS-POMPIERS DE PARIS A fire rages through the top floors of an apartment building in Paris, France. The Paris fire service says seven people have been killed and at least 28 injured in a fire in a residentia­l building.

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