The Peterborough Examiner

Chicago apartment fire kills 8 — including 6 children

Woman who alerted other tenants to blaze ‘saved a lot of lives,’ says fire commission­er

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CHICAGO — Eight people, including six children, were killed when a fire broke out before dawn Sunday at a Chicago apartment in one of the deadliest fires in the nation’s third-largest city in years, officials say.

Two other people were hospitaliz­ed in very critical condition, Chicago Fire Department spokespers­on Larry Merritt said.

One of the children who died was an infant, according to fire commission­er Jose Santiago.

“We have not had this in many, many, many years — this amount of fatalities and injuries in one location,” he said.

A memorial along a nearby sidewalk included crosses for each child who died — a small Mickey Mouse doll sat next to one. The Rev. Clifford Spears of Saint Michael Missionary Baptist Church led a crowd that gathered in prayer, the Chicago Tribune reported. A candleligh­t vigil was planned for Sunday night.

Officials have not released the names or ages of the victims, all of whom were in the same residence, Merritt said. The cause of the blaze hasn’t been determined.

A woman who saw the blaze as she was returning home from work alerted people and gave them a chance to escape, Santiago said. She called 911 about 4 a.m., then began knocking on doors in the largely Hispanic Little Village neighbourh­ood on the city’s southwest side.

“So the female who did that saved a lot of lives,” Santiago said.

At least two buildings caught fire, one of them described by fire department officials as a coach house.

Video showed smoke coming from windows of a three-storey building’s stone facade, with flames engulfing the back. Police officers helped push a stretcher toward an ambulance, while a paramedic simultaneo­usly performed CPR. One woman laid on a street crying while someone tried to comfort her.

The fire was put out just after 5 a.m., fire department officials said. At least one firefighte­r was injured and was hospitaliz­ed in good condition.

Merritt said investigat­ors have not found working smoke alarms.

The American Red Cross planned to work with the Chicago Fire Department to canvass the neighbourh­ood to ensure homes have functional smoke alarms installed, the CEO of the Chicago & Northern Illinois Red Cross, Celena Roldan, told the Chicago Sun-Times.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES ?? Family, friends and neighbours mourn the loss of eight people, including six children, who perished in an early-morning fire on Sunday in Chicago. Two victims of the fire remain in hospital in critical condition.
SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES Family, friends and neighbours mourn the loss of eight people, including six children, who perished in an early-morning fire on Sunday in Chicago. Two victims of the fire remain in hospital in critical condition.

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