Home>News Center>World
         
 

Paris hotel fire kills at least 17
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-04-15 11:53

A fire roared through a central Paris hotel early Friday, killing at least 17 people and injuring dozens more, fire officials said. A witness said he saw several hotel guests leap from windows to escape the flames.

The fire occurred in the one-star Paris Opera hotel in the capital's 9th district, an area frequented by tourists. At least 57 people were injured, 12 seriously, said fire services spokesman Laurent Vibert. Many of the guests were African, he said.

French firemen operate near a hotel where a fire had started earlier in the morning, Paris, April 15, 2005. At least 13 people were killed and dozens hurt in a fire that swept through a hotel in central Paris early on Friday near the Galeries Lafayette luxury department store, fire officials said. [Reuters]
French firemen operate near a hotel where a fire had started earlier in the morning, Paris, April 15, 2005. At least 17 people were killed and dozens hurt in a fire that swept through a hotel in central Paris early on Friday near the Galeries Lafayette luxury department store, fire officials said. [Reuters]
Firefighters rescued some people from the hotel, but others jumped out of windows to escape flames and choking smoke, said Vibert.

Chakib San, who lives in an adjacent building, said he was awakened by cries of "Fire! Fire!" He said he saw three people jump from low floors of the six-story building, including a woman and a child who lay motionless after hitting the ground.

"They were on the ground. They weren't moving," he said.

An ambulance is parked near a Parisian hotel where a fire had started in earlier in the morning in Paris April 15, 2005. [Reuters] 
An ambulance is parked near a Parisian hotel where a fire had started in earlier in the morning in Paris April 15, 2005. [Reuters]
"Everyone was screaming," he added. "There were bodies in the road."

The injured were treated and the dead bodies temporarily stored in the Galaries Lafayette department store, one of Paris' busiest and most famous stores.

The fire took more than an hour to bring under control and was still smoldering hours later. Some 250 firefighters and 50 fire engines responded.

Nearly all of the six floors were blackened inside.

Many guests were African, but there were also at least three Canadians in the hotel, one of whom was slightly injured, said Vibert.

France's Interior Minister Dominique de Villepin (L) talks to journalists near a Parisian hotel where a fire had started earlier in the morning in Paris April 15, 2005. [Reuters]
France's Interior Minister Dominique de Villepin (L) talks to journalists near a Parisian hotel where a fire had started earlier in the morning in Paris April 15, 2005. [Reuters]
The dead were recovered "from the road, from inside, just about everywhere," he said.

The hotel owner believes the fire broke out in a second floor breakfast room, Vibert added.

San said he spoke to Australians, Canadians and Tunisians who escaped the fire. A woman who works in a nearby hotel brought out a ladder and together they used it to rescue a girl from the first floor, said San.

"We got out a little girl. The fire services arrived just afterward," he said.



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Bush: China a great nation growing like mad

 

   
 

Canada denies sanctuary for Lai Changxing

 

   
 

Koizumi calls for dialogue on oil dispute

 

   
 

Schroeder to Japan: Be self-critical of history

 

   
 

Cancer chemical in French fries and coffee?

 

   
 

Standards released for State firm buyouts

 

   
  Paris hotel fire kills at least 17
   
  Ex-Guantanamo prisoner didn't know of 9/11
   
  Abbas tries to reform security services
   
  France's Chirac tries to save EU Constitution
   
  Four charged in U.N. oil-for-food scandal
   
  US bans cigarette lighters from airplanes
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Blaze engulfs major market in Niger's capital
   
Fire in red-crested crane habitat under control
   
Fire sweeps through Moscow art market
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Advertisement