The Borneo Post

Guard burns six small kids to death in Brazil horror

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RIO DE JANEIRO: A Brazilian nursery school guard burned six small children and a teacher to death after spraying them with alcohol and setting them alight Thursday in an attack which has horrified the nation.

Dozens of people were also hurt in the blaze while the guard, who was reported to be mentally ill, died after succumbing to his own burn injuries.

The tragedy occurred in a modest quarter of Janauba, a city of 70,000 about 600 kilometers north of Belo Horizonte city.

The nursery school was called ‘Innocent People’.

The initial death toll of four rose to six when two badly burned kids died, according to news reports which quoted fire officials.

Janauba’s mayor decreed seven days of mourning.

About 50 people were hospitalis­ed with injuries, said Bruno Ataide Santos, director of the local hospital.

Hours later, 10 people remained hospitalis­ed in serious condition.

The guard, who was aged about 50 and identified as Damiao Soares, died in hospital several hours after the incident, which left him with burns all over his body, Santos told AFP.

About 80 children were in the

As the creche is near our house, we heard noise and rushed over. Nelson de Jesus Silva, father of one victim

nursery school when the attack occurred, prompting terrified parents to rush to the school, where they found one classroom reduced to ashes.

“As the creche is near our house, we heard noise and rushed over,” Nelson de Jesus Silva, the father of one victim, told Globonews TV.

“My little girl was so good, so smart,” he said of his dead daughter Ana Clara Ferreira.

Grief also struck Jane Kelly, the mother of Juan Miguel Soares.

“I was thinking of changing nursery schools because we are preparing to move. I woke him up early to bring him here and when I saw him again he was dead in the hospital,” Kelly said between sobs.

The dead children were aged four, the G1 news site reported.

Police visited the home of the suspect and his family members to try to determine a motive.

But police superinten­dent Renato Nunes told the website of the Hoje em Dia newspaper that the guard had had mental health problems since 2014.

The guard had worked nights for at least eight years at the nursery school, where he was not directly in contact with the children.

Janauba’s mayor Carlos Isaildon Mendes said an even greater tragedy was narrowly averted.

“This could have been worse because the babies’ room was in the hall next door. Evacuation would have been more difficult. As the children were bigger, a lot of them were able to escape,” the mayor explained.

Police searched the guard’s home and found many jugs of alcohol. He reportedly told his family this week — which includes the anniversar­y of the death of his father — that he was going to give a ‘gift’ to them and that he would die.

Brazil’s President Michel Temer expressed his condolence­s on Twitter.

“I am deeply saddened by this tragedy involving children in Janauba, and I want to express my solidarity with the families,” Temer wrote.

As the father of a school- age child, Temer said he understood ‘this must be an extremely painful loss’ for the parents. — AFP TOKYO: Japan’s air force said yesterday it will send its new C2 long-range heavy lift military cargo plane overseas for the first time to show it off to potential buyers in the Middle East and New Zealand.

Built by Kawasaki Heavy Industries, the C-2 will fly to the United Arab Emirates on Nov 8 to participat­e in the Dubai Airshow and will be on display in New Zealand from Nov 25 to Dec 1, the Japan Air Self Defence Force said in a news release.

A C-2 sale would secure Japan its first major overseas arms contract.

“A number of nations have shown interest in the C-2 and we want to show off our advanced technology,” Japan’s Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera told a regular media briefing.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe lifted a decades- old ban on arms exports in 2014 in a bid to lower procuremen­t costs by widening production bases and use militaryin­dustrial collaborat­ion to bolster diplomatic ties.v — Reuters

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