Bangkok Post

Man released in cathedral arson probe

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PARIS: French investigat­ors on Sunday released a man who worked as a volunteer at the gothic cathedral of Nantes which was badly damaged by fire hours after he closed it up for the night.

Prosecutor­s launched an arson investigat­ion after the Saturday morning blaze which they said appeared to have broken out in three different parts of the Cathedral of St Peter and St Paul in Nantes, western France.

The questionin­g on Sunday had sought to “clarify elements of the schedule” of the volunteer, who had been in charge of closing up the cathedral on Friday evening, Nantes prosecutor Pierre Sennes said.

He was held as part of “normal procedure” and it would have been “premature” to suggest the man was a suspect, the prosecutor said earlier.

Later on Sunday, however, Mr Sennes confirmed that the man had been released “without charge”.

Before his release, Quentin Chabert, a lawyer for the volunteer, told reporters that for the moment “there is nothing that directly links my client to the fire”.

The cathedral’s rector, Hubert Champenois, said the man was a Rwandan asylum-seeker in France for several years.

The man volunteere­d as an altar server and would have been the last to leave the cathedral on Friday, he said.

Mr Champenois said he had known the 39-year-old for four or five years, adding: “I trust him like I trust all the helpers.”

The blaze, which came just 15 months after a devastatin­g fire tore through the Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris, destroyed the Nantes congregati­on’s famed organ, which dated from 1621 and had survived the French Revolution and World War II bombardmen­t.

Also lost were priceless artefacts and paintings, including a work by 19thcentur­y artist Hippolyte Flandrin and stained glass windows which contained remnants of 16th-century glass.

About 100 firefighte­rs managed to save the main structure of the cathedral, which was constructe­d over more than 450 years starting in 1434.

Mr Sennes said experts from a police unit specialise­d in fire investigat­ions were at the scene on Sunday, awaiting authorisat­ion from firefighte­rs to examine the platform which had held the grand organ.

On Saturday, Mr Sennes said a preliminar­y examinatio­n had found no signs of forced entry at the cathedral.

Investigat­ors did find three separate fire outbreak spots, at “a substantia­l distance” from one another and at opposite ends of the church, he said, which led to the opening of an arson probe.

One of the fires started near the organ which was on the first level of the cathedral and accessible by 66 steps.

 ?? AFP ?? Quentin Chabert, the lawyer of the man held in custody over Nantes’ cathedral fire, answers journalist­s’ questions outside a police station on Sunday.
AFP Quentin Chabert, the lawyer of the man held in custody over Nantes’ cathedral fire, answers journalist­s’ questions outside a police station on Sunday.

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