The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Fire ravages South Africa’s 138-year-old Parliament complex

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CAPE TOWN, South Africa — A major fire ripped through South Africa’s 138-year-old Parliament complex on Sunday, gutting offices and causing some ceilings to collapse at a site that has hosted some of the country’s pivotal moments. As firefighte­rs struggled to tame the blaze, a dark plume of smoke and flames rose high into the air above the southern city of Cape Town.

Around 70 firefighte­rs were still battling the fire hours after it started in the early morning, Cape Town’s Fire and Rescue Service spokesman Jermaine Carelse said. Some were lifted up on a crane to spray water on the blaze from above. No injuries have been reported and Parliament itself had been closed for the holidays.

Visiting the scene, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said a person was “being held and is being questioned” by police in connection with the blaze. Police later confirmed a 51-year-old man had been detained.

“The fire is currently in the National Assembly chambers,” Minister of Public Works and Infrastruc­ture Patricia de Lille told reporters as smoke billowed behind her from the roof of the historic white building with grand entrance columns. “This is a very sad day for democracy, for Parliament is the home of our democracy.”

“We have not been able to contain the fire in the National Assembly,” she added. “Part of the ceilings have collapsed.”

Officials said the fire started in the Old Assembly building,

which was built in 1884 and originally housed the South African Parliament but is now used for offices. It spread to the newer National Assembly building, built in the 1980s, which is where the Parliament now sits.

Authoritie­s feared extensive damage to both buildings, which have stark white facades, elaborate roof linings and majestic columns, now all obscured by flames and smoke. There were also fears that priceless artifacts inside, including a manuscript where the composer first wrote some lyrics for South Africa’s national anthem, would be lost forever.

Carelse warned that both

buildings were at risk of collapsing.

While the Old Assembly building was closely connected to South Africa’s colonial and apartheid history, the National Assembly building was where former President F.W. de Klerk stood up at the opening of Parliament in 1990 and announced he was freeing Nelson Mandela from prison and effectivel­y ending the apartheid system of white minority rule. The news electrifie­d the country and reverberat­ed around the world.

Security guards first reported the fire at around 6 a.m. Sunday, Carelse said, and the 35 firefighte­rs initially on the scene quickly called for reinforcem­ents. Cape Town activated

its Disaster Coordinati­ng Team, which reacts to major emergencie­s. Police cordoned off the complex and closed nearby roads.

De Lille said an investigat­ion was underway into the cause of the blaze. Authoritie­s were reviewing video camera footage and questionin­g the man arrested at the precinct.

Parliament speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula cautioned against speculatio­n that it was a deliberate attack on South Africa’s seat of democracy.

“Until such a time that a report has been furnished that there was arson, we have to be careful not to make suggestion­s that there was an attack,” she said.

 ?? Jerome Delay / Associated Press ?? Firefighte­rs spray water on flames erupting from a building at South Africa's Parliament in Cape Town on Sunday.
Jerome Delay / Associated Press Firefighte­rs spray water on flames erupting from a building at South Africa's Parliament in Cape Town on Sunday.

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