Yorkshire Post

Apartments blaze kills at least 10

- CHARLES BROWN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

PARIS’ DEADLIEST fire in more than a decade claimed at least 10 lives, sending fleeing residents to the roof to escape the flames that engulfed their apartment building before dawn.

A 40-year-old female resident, said to have a history of psychiatri­c problems, was detained near the eight-story building in the quiet neighbourh­ood as police opened an investigat­ion into voluntary arson resulting in death.

It is the deadliest fire in Paris since the April 2005 hotel fire near the capital’s famed Opera that killed 24 people.

French President Emmanuel Macron took to Twitter to express that “France wakes up with emotion after the fire in rue Erlanger in Paris last night”.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner was the highest-ranking official on the scene, as plumes of smoke speckled the sky.

“I want to salute the huge mobilisati­on of the Paris firefighte­rs,” he said. “More than 250 people arrived immediatel­y and, throughout the night, saved over 50 people in truly exceptiona­l conditions.”

Firefighte­rs rescued some from the roof as well as others who had clambered out of windows to escape the flames.

Mr Castaner said the blaze that started on the second floor had been extinguish­ed, and that over 30 people were being treated for “relatively” light injuries.

“I heard a woman screaming in the street, crying and screaming for help,” said witness Jacqueline Ravier, who lives across the street.

She saw a young man blackened by smoke and a woman motionless on the ground. She said flames were shooting out for hours from the top of the building and smoke-covered victims were fleeing.

She said shaken residents were brought to her building and the one next door while firefighte­rs continued to fight the flames.

“We feel the smoke,” she said. “What’s surprising is how long it lasted.”

City fire service spokesman Clement Cognon told reporters that firefighte­rs went door-todoor to ensure there are no more victims and to prevent residual fires.

“The situation was already dramatic when the firefighte­rs arrived,” Mr Cognon said.

Emergency workers are also seeking to shore up the building that was badly damaged after flames shot out of windows stretching across the upper floors, in images of the operation released by the fire service.

Prosecutor Remy Heitz told reporters at the scene that authoritie­s suspect it was a criminal act.

Mr Castaner said the woman detained had “a history of psychiatri­c problems”.

Among the injured were at least eight firefighte­rs, according to the Paris firefighte­rs.

The fire comes a month after a deadly explosion and blaze linked to a gas leak in a Paris bakery.

Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo tweeted her sympathies after learning the news. “Paris is mourning this morning after the ferocious fire in a building in the 16th arrondisse­ment. The toll is terrible,”.

She and Interior Minister Christophe Castaner attended the scene early Tuesday morning. Speaking alongside Heitz and Castaner at an impromptu press conference, Hidalgo said the building was very difficult for fire ambulances to access, and had at least 50 apartments.

France wakes up with emotion after the fire in Paris last night.

French President Emmanuel Macron on Twitter.

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