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Fire kills 11 at residence for elderly people in Japan

A general view of the ruins after a fire at a residence for elderly people in Sapporo, northern Japan, on February 1, 2018 (photo by AFP)

Eleven people died after a fire broke out at a residence for elderly people with financial difficulties in northern Japan, police said on Thursday.

Television footage showed the three-storey building engulfed in flames and dozens of firefighters battling the blaze in snowy conditions.

Pictures of the aftermath showed the blackened husk of the building, whose roof had apparently collapsed due to the fire.

The victims — eight men and three women — were among 16 residents of the facility in Sapporo, Hokkaido, run by a local organization.

The other five residents escaped with minor injuries, a police spokesman told AFP, adding that authorities were investigating the victims' identities.

Police said they had launched a probe into the cause of the fire first alerted at 11:42 pm (1442 GMT) Wednesday via an emergency call, the spokesman said.

The facility is aimed at supporting elderly people with financial difficulties by offering low-cost accommodation and helping them find work, public broadcaster NHK reported.

It is usually unstaffed overnight, according to local media.

The accommodation was originally a Japanese inn built around 50 years ago that was later turned into the welfare facility.

Policemen and firefighters check the ruins after a fire at a residence for elderly people in Sapporo, northern Japan, on February 1, 2018. (Photo by AFP)

"As there were many oil tanks (for kerosene stoves) there, I heard a number of small explosions," a 67-year-old woman in the neighborhood told Jiji Press.

"Luckily, the only damage to our house was some cracks on the window," she was quoted as saying.

After dawn, police and firefighters were combing the black remains of furniture in freezing temperatures.

Another woman in the neighborhood, 65, said she spotted smoke and flames while she was watching the total lunar eclipse from the window of her house, Jiji Press said.

"The smoke and flames were rising vertically. If there had been wind, the damage would have been bigger," she told Jiji.

"The surrounding area was bright as if it were a day because of efforts to extinguish fire, and smoke lasted until near the dawn," she said.

Others saw ash falling like snow in the vicinity of the fire, local media reported.

The fire sparked memories of a similar incident in Sapporo in 2010 when seven residents of a private nursing home for the elderly were killed in a pre-dawn fire.

Four women and three men aged in their 60s to their 80s died when the blaze swept through the two-storey wooden house.

In that case, all the residents were believed to suffer from dementia.

(Source: AFP)


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