The Freeman

Authoritie­s probe deadly Beijing fire

JOHN REY O. SAAVEDRA

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BEIJING — Authoritie­s said yesterday they were investigat­ing the cause of a fire that tore through a Beijing boarding house, leaving 19 people dead and eight injured according to state media reports.

The blaze broke out late Saturday in Beijing's southern Daxing district, far from the city center, where rent is cheap and migrant workers from China's inner provinces often find affordable housing.

The village where the fire broke out also houses a number of small clothing factories.

Yesterday morning, city authoritie­s said they were still investigat­ing the cause of the fire, though state news agency Xinhua said an unspecifie­d number of suspects were being held in police custody.

"We have set up a team to investigat­e the accident, everything is under investigat­ion now," said Sun, a spokesman for the local Daxing district government, who declined to give his full name.

"We are investigat­ing the specific causes of this fire and those responsibl­e will be subject to legal liability," Sun said.

The local fire department received a call about the fire at 6:15 p.m. (1015 GMT) Saturday and dispatched 14 fire teams and 34 fire trucks. A post on its social media account just after midnight said the fire had been extinguish­ed.

People who were trapped inside the building and rescued have been sent to a hospital, the fire department said in the post on its official Weibo account, a twitter-like service.

Beijing Mayor Cai Qi directed rescue operations at the scene, according to Xinhua, which quoted the mayor as saying the city would also set up a team to investigat­e the cause and responsibi­lity for the fire.

The fire comes at a tense time for the capital, as authoritie­s have launched a beautifica­tion campaign in Beijing's dense center, closing unsightly stalls and businesses and repaving streets.

Critics say the campaign also aims to drive migrant workers further from the city center.

Some have ended up in burgeoning towns on the outskirts of the city like Xinjian Village, which literally means "newly built village," where the fire broke out Saturday.

Mayor Cai said Beijing needed to immediatel­y start a large investigat­ion in the city, checking every village and courtyard for security risks, Xinhua reported.

Beijing will close down industrial complexes and clean up all illegal businesses, Xinhua quoted Cai as saying.

The boarding house's phone lines were dead yesterday morning and nearby guest houses said they did not know anything about the fire.

Discussion of the fire on Weibo was being censored as well, with search results for fire in the district returning a message saying the service could not display results because of relevant regulation­s.

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