South African parliament buildings ‘gutted’ after large fire
By Lynsey Chutel and Austin Ramzy
CAPE TOWN — A large fire at South Africa’s Houses of Parliament on Sunday (2) sent flames and smoke billowing from rooftops and fire crews racing to save the historic structures.
Officials said the fire spread from an office space on the third floor of a building adjacent to the old National Assembly building toward a gym and to rooftops. The scale of the destruction was not immediately clear, they said, but there were fires burning in “two very distinct areas,” and they warned that it was likely to be extensive.
Parliament’s spokesman, Moloto Mothapo, said Sunday evening that a man in his early 50s was arrested inside the parliamentary complex Sunday morning in connection to the fire, but he did not give any further details.
“The entire parliamentary complex is severely damaged — waterlogged and smoke damaged,” JP Smith, Cape Town’s mayoral committee member for safety and security, said, adding that “the roof above the old assembly hall is completely gone.”
“The second point of fire is the National Assembly building, which is gutted,” Smith said, referring to the building where the Parliament meets. “The structural ceiling has collapsed. The fire staff had to be momentarily withdrawn.”
Cape Town’s Fire and Rescue Service spokesman, Jermaine Carelse, warned that the buildings themselves were at risk of collapse, given the intense heat of the fire.
The roofing material was “even melting”, he said, according to the News24 website, adding, “There have been reports of some walls showing cracks.”
The fire was reported around 6:00 a.m. and was still burning late Sunday afternoon. No injuries or fatalities have been reported. Parliament was not in session because it had been closed for the holidays.
Investigators surveying the scene were trying to ascertain how the fire started and why it burned as it did.
“They will have to determine how the fire spread from the one blaze to the second blaze,” Smith said, “because these are two very distinct areas.”
President Cyril Ramaphosa also arrived to inspect the damage Sunday afternoon, and he said in a statement that he was “deeply saddened” by the event.
He added that it was “very clear that this fire has devastated the parliamentary precinct and its contents and assets, including Parliament’s historical treasures of heritage.”
As the fire raged early on, smoke poured from the National Assembly building’s main entrance. Later, as it was brought more under control, the smoke gave way to show the entrance’s windows blackened.
Parliamentary officials said they were not aware of any sensitive documents that might have been affected by the fire. But offices belonging to lawmakers in the African National Congress as well as in two smaller opposition parties — the Good Party and the National Freedom Party — were among those badly damaged.
The complex includes a structure completed in the late 1800s that is home to the National Council of Parliament, the country’s upper house. The National Assembly building is a newer addition.
In March, the older building caught fire, but that blaze was quickly extinguished.
“It’s tragic that we’re starting the new year on this basis, with a fire in the old assembly that seems to be spreading to the new assembly,” Steven Swart, chief whip of the African Christian Democratic Party, said Sunday.
The fire was still burning hours after it was first reported. At least six fire trucks and about 70 firefighters and police officers were sent to the scene, Smith said, and the streets around the complex were closed off.
The blaze broke out a day after the funeral of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate who helped lead the fight against apartheid in South Africa. It was held at St. George’s Cathedral, which is a few minutes’ walk from the Houses of Parliament. The archbishop’s ashes were interred in the cathedral Sunday morning, in a private ceremony for his family around the time the fire was spotted.
Cape Town is no stranger to fires, and wildfires on the slopes of its famed Table Mountain have had a devastating effect in recent years. Last year, a wildfire spread to the University of Cape Town, where it devoured the special collections library — home to one of the most expansive collections of first-edition books, films, photographs and other primary sources documenting the history of Southern Africa.
-New York Times