Current:Home > FinanceSouth Africa begins an inquiry into a building fire that killed 76 people in Johannesburg in August -TrueNorth Capital Hub
South Africa begins an inquiry into a building fire that killed 76 people in Johannesburg in August
View
Date:2025-04-19 05:58:04
CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — An inquiry began Thursday into an apartment building fire that killed 76 people in South Africa in August and laid bare the deep problems of poverty and neglect in parts of Africa’s richest city.
The nighttime blaze swept through a five-story building in the Marshalltown district of Johannesburg, trapping many of the hundreds of people who were living there in badly overcrowded conditions.
The building was believed to be one of what are known as “hijacked” buildings in Johannesburg. Authorities suspect it had been taken over by illegal landlords, who were renting out space to poor South Africans and foreign migrants looking desperately for somewhere to live.
Johannesburg Emergency Services acting chief Rapulane Monageng gave the first testimony of the inquiry and said that firefighters found no fire extinguishers anywhere in the building. They had all been taken off the walls, he said. A large fire hose had also been removed and the water pipe supplying it had been converted for “domestic use,” he testified.
The doors to the building’s main fire escape were chained closed and other emergency exits were locked, and there was only one way in and out of the building, he said. The inside of the building was littered with small living areas partitioned off with plywood and other highly flammable materials and people were living in the stairways, corridors and bathrooms.
“It was mind-boggling that (people) even took a bathroom and converted it into a bedroom,” Monageng said.
The crowded conditions and the wood used for shacks and partitions combined to make it an extremely dangerous fire hazard, he said.
He called it a “ticking time bomb.”
Police opened a criminal case in the days after the fire in the pre-dawn hours of Aug. 31 and declared the building a crime scene, but no one has been formally charged over one of South Africa’s deadliest urban fires.
It also came to light that the building was owned by the city, but authorities had effectively abandoned it and weren’t in control of its running.
The inquiry was announced by South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in early September. It’s being overseen by a three-member panel headed by retired Constitutional Court judge Justice Sisi Khampepe and is aimed at uncovering what the cause of the fire was and if anyone should be held responsible for the 76 deaths, which included at least 12 children.
More than 80 people were injured, including many who sustained broken limbs and backs after jumping out of the building’s windows to escape the fire.
The bodies of 33 of the 76 victims of the fire still haven’t been claimed by relatives and remain at a mortuary in Johannesburg two months later, a provincial health department spokesman said in a statement sent on Thursday to The Associated Press.
___
AP Africa news: https://apnews.com/hub/africa
veryGood! (55651)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Detroit is banning gas stations from locking customers inside, a year after a fatal shooting
- New Jersey man flew to Florida to kill fellow gamer after online dispute, police say
- Can Panthers, Oilers keep their teams together? Plenty of contracts are expiring.
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Georgia Supreme Court removes county probate judge over ethics charges
- 2024 Euros: 'Own goals' lead scorers in group stage
- Rodeo Star Spencer Wright Remembers Late Son Levi, 3, at Heartbreaking Funeral Service
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- 5 people killed, teen girl injured in Las Vegas apartment shootings; manhunt ends with arrest
Ranking
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- California governor defends progressive values, says they’re an ‘antidote’ to populism on the right
- Town in Washington state to pay $15 million to parents of 13-year-old who drowned at summer camp
- Amazon wants more powerful Alexa, potentially with monthly fees: Reports
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Judge blocks Michigan’s abortion waiting period, 2 years after voters approved abortion rights
- In Karen Read’s murder trial, was it deadly romance or police corruption? Jurors must decide
- New York Knicks acquiring Mikal Bridges in pricey trade with Brooklyn Nets. Who won?
Recommendation
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
2024 NBA draft features another French revolution with four players on first-round board
Native American ceremony will celebrate birth of white buffalo calf in Yellowstone park
Selma Blair Turns Heads With Necktie Made of Blonde Braided Hair at Paris Fashion Week
Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
Walmart's Fourth of July Sale Includes Up to 81% Off Home Essentials From Shark, Roku, Waterpik & More
No evidence new COVID variant LB.1 causes more severe disease, CDC says
Alec Baldwin attorneys say FBI testing damaged gun that killed cinematographer; claim evidence destroyed