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Four children among 12 dead following fire at New York apartment building

Updated 15.45 A fire in New York that killed 12 people, including four children, is thought to ha...
Newstalk
Newstalk

08.44 29 Dec 2017


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Four children among 12 dead fo...

Four children among 12 dead following fire at New York apartment building

Newstalk
Newstalk

08.44 29 Dec 2017


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Updated 15.45

A fire in New York that killed 12 people, including four children, is thought to have been started by a child playing with a stove.

New York City mayor Bill De Blasio has told local media that investigators believe the inferno was sparked inside the building.

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Local media is reporting that a one-year-old toddler, a two-year-old and a seven-year-old are among the dead, along with an unidentified boy, four men and four women.

Another four people are in hospital "fighting for their lives", the mayor said.

New York fire commissioner Daniel Nigro described the blaze, which broke out at around 7pm local time, as "historic in its magnitude".

More than 160 firefighters were called to the five-storey building near Bronx Zoo and worked to extinguish the fire in freezing conditions, with water sprayed from hoses turning to ice on the street.

Mayor Bill De Blasio said the blaze would "rank as one of the worst losses of life to a fire in many, many years".

Picture by: Wang Ying/Xinhua News Agency/PA Images

NY Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro told a news conference that those killed ranged in age from one to 50 and added that "people died on various floors of the apartment".

Excluding the 9/11 terror attacks, it was the worst fire in the city since 87 people were killed at a social club fire - also in the Bronx - in 1990.

And in 2007, a fire in the Bronx killed nine children and an adult.

Mr De Blasio later tweeted his thanks to the New York Fire Department "for their bravery and quick action".

He observed: "I want to offer my prayers to all the families who have lost their loved ones this evening or who are struggling. I ask all New Yorkers to keep them in your prayers, too."

Mr Nigro added: "We may lose others as well. Our hearts go out to every person who lost a loved one here and everyone who is fighting for their lives.

"In a department that's certainly no stranger to tragedy, we're shocked at this loss."

Windows on some upper floors were smashed and blackened as the flames ripped through the building, which according to city records did not have an elevator.

Neighbourhood resident Robert Gonzalez, who has a friend who lives in the building, said she got out on a fire escape as another resident fled with five children.

Another local, Jamal Flicker, told the New York Post: "The smoke was crazy, people screaming, 'get out!' I heard a woman yelling, 'we're trapped, help!'."

The cause of the fire is not yet known.


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