Fire kills one, three injured

New Delhi, June 5 — A person died and three others were seriously injured, after a fire broke out on Friday night in a four-storey footwear warehouse in northwest Delhi. Delhi Fire Service (DFS) officials said the incident was reported from Jai Mata Market located in Keshavpuram’s A2 block at 11.30 p.m. “The fire broke out at a storage facility located in the building’s basement and soon enveloped the entire building,” said a senior DFS official. He said four labourers, who were sleeping on the ground floor were trapped, but were rescued as soon as possible. One of them, who is yet to be identified, died after falling unconscious due to the fumes and got burnt, the official said. Eight fire tenders were called to fight the fire. Residents, however, blamed a delay in the arrival of the fire tenders for the labourer’s death.

The DFS refuted his claims. “We had to take a six-km long detour to reach the area as a flyover is being constructed near Britannia Chowk. We reached the spot as soon as possible,” a DFS official said.

Fire destroys Carlton River house

Fire has destroyed a house in Tasmania’s south-east overnight.

Fire crews were called to the Carlton River home just 9:00pm.

The blaze caused about $300,000 damage.

The Fire Service says no one was home at the time and investigations into the cause are continuing.

Rains kill at least 95 in Rio, paralyze city

Landslides and floods set off by the heaviest rains in decades killed at least 95 people in Rio de Janeiro state, making hundreds homeless, flooding roads and paralyzing Brazil’s second city on Tuesday.

Mudslides swept away shacks in Rio’s hillside slums, turning the city’s main lake and the sea brown during the heavy rains that started on Monday and continued to fall through most of Tuesday.

Most victims died in more than 180 mudslides, authorities said. Rio’s fire service said at least 40 injured people were taken to hospitals as the search went on for others reported missing, and that the death toll was certain to rise.

Mayor Eduardo Paes warned residents to stay away from risky hillside areas and said public schools would stay closed for a second day on Wednesday as more heavy rain was forecast through the night.

Officials said 39 people died in metropolitan Rio, famous for its Carnival and beaches, and 41 were killed in Niteroi, the city on the other side of Rio’s Guanabara Bay. The fire service said a total of 95 people were killed across the state.

The mayor said 1,200 people had been made homeless and that 10,000 houses remained at risk, mostly in the slums where about a fifth of Rio’s people live, often in precarious shacks that are highly vulnerable to heavy rains.

Morning flights in and out of the city of 6 million people — which will host the 2014 soccer World Cup and the 2016 Olympics — were canceled or seriously delayed and many neighborhoods were cut off from power and transport.

Many companies shut down their offices for the day as torrents of water snarled traffic.

Joabes Araujo da Silva, a 21-year-old telemarketer, told Brazil’s Globo news the mudslide swept away his house in the Buraco Quente neighborhood.

“I only got out of the house, which was full of mud, when my dad pushed the door open. We couldn’t get out the window. It was the scariest thing when I saw the house I’ve lived in for 20 years fall,” he said.

SLUMS BEAR BRUNT

The downpour, which began late on Monday, is the worst Rio has recorded in at least 30 years.

In less than 24 hours, Paes said, 9 inches (28.8 cm) of rain fell on the city — more than what meteorologists said was expected for all of April. After a break, heavy rains began again in mid-afternoon, raising fears of more mudslides.

The latest flooding and transportation chaos will renew attention on Rio’s poor infrastructure as it prepares to host the World Cup and the Olympics.

The Southern Hemisphere summer has been particularly hot and rainy in Rio this year.

In January, at least 76 people died in flooding and mudslides in Brazil’s most populous states of Rio, Sao Paulo and Minas Gerais. Then, dozens of people were killed in a landslide at a beach resort between Rio and the port city of Santos.

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva canceled an event on Tuesday where he was due to inaugurate public works projects.

“No one could cope with the rain that we are seeing, which is the worst in Rio’s history,” Lula said.

Globo showed images of houses that slid down a ravine, crumbling to pieces under the mud. Rescuers pulled people to safety from cars stranded in waist-high rushing water.

At least three residents of a slum in Rio’s northern zone, including a five-month-old baby, were killed when a mudslide hit two houses, according to media reports.

Television images showed central parts of Rio flooded and abandoned cars under water. Near Copacabana beach, residents waded through ankle-deep water on their way to work but many commuters got stuck in traffic and returned home.

(Additional reporting by Brian Ellsworth; writing by Raymond Colitt and Stuart Grudgings; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Cairns students fall ill from fumes

Authorities are investigating an incident in which more than 20 students were overcome by fumes at a Cairns school laboratory in far north Queensland.

The year seven students were taking part in a lesson in their science classroom at Redlynch College when they began suffering from breathing difficulties and skin irritations.

21 children were taken to Cairns Base Hospital.

Education Queensland spokesman Colin Allen-Waters says the students were not conducting any experiments.

“No chemicals were being used in the classroom so we’re not sure what was the cause,” he said.

The area was cordoned off while Queensland Fire and Rescue Service (QFRS) conducted air tests.

Superintendent Darren Walsh says police will also investigate the incident.

House fire sends two to hospital

Detectives are investigating an overnight house fire in Lismore.

Emergency service crews were called to a home in Hindmarsh Street at about half past three.

Police say two men were seen in a car in the area around the time the blaze started in a garage.

Two children were checked at the scene by ambulance officers and two people were taken to the Lismore Base Hospital with smoke inhalation.

Three in hospital after house blaze

Three people are being treated in hospital for smoke inhalation after an overnight house fire on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.

A fire service spokesman says the blaze in the house at Warana broke out about 11:00pm (AEST).

A man, a woman and a child were taken to Caloundra Hospital.

The front of the house has been destroyed and the remainder has significant smoke and water damage.

Fire investigators will examine the scene today.

Experts probe restaurant blaze

Authorities will today begin investigating the cause of a fire that destroyed a restaurant and an adjoining residence on the Atherton Tablelands in far north Queensland overnight.

The blaze at the Tarzali Roundyard Restaurant broke out before 3:00am (AEST).

The Queensland Fire and Rescue Service says five crews worked to extinguish the fire.

Authorities say everyone at the property escaped the blaze without injury.

Deadly blaze guts Gold Coast units

Queensland’s Fire Service says one person has died in a fire in a two-storey block of units on the Gold Coast at Surfers Paradise.

Seven crews battled the mid-morning blaze which badly damaged the four units in the block on Surfers Paradise Boulevard.

One firefighter collapsed at the scene and is in a satisfactory condition in hospital.

Investigators are checking the cause of the fire.

Fire breaks out at Poonch checkpost

Poonch, July 9 (ANI): A fire broke out at the Tetrinote and Chakkan-Da-Bagh checkposts on the India-Pakistan border in Poonch in Jammu and Kashmir on Wednesday evening.

Fanned by winds and dry grass, the blazing flames spread across three hectares of forest area, destroying flora and fauna. It took fire fighters six hours to bring the blaze under control.

Forest department, fire brigade and army personnel teamed up to douse the fire.

Extinguishing the fire became extremely dangerous and risky as there were instances of minefields exploding while coming in contact with the wildfire.

“The fire started 20 metres inside the Line of Control on the Pakistani side,” said Shyam Lal, a fire service official.

This was the 10th instance of a forest fire in the district.

An FIR has been lodged in the forest office of Poonch for further investigations. (ANI)

A dozen of Havelock women pose nude for cancer charity

Wellington, May 25 (ANI): In a bid to raise funds for breast cancer and the fire service, twelve of Havelock women have posed nude as “calendar girls”.

One of them even went to the extent of wearing nothing but a mussel shell for the shoot.

Tania Varcoe posed for her photograph outside The Mussel Pot restaurant dressed just in a big mussel shell.

In fact, just when the mussel maiden was getting clicked, she was spotted by the passengers of the InterCity coachline.

“I was shocked, as I use those buses to go to Christchurch and I knew the driver, but as I am normally dressed I don’t think he recognised me,” the NZPA quoted her as saying.

She added: “The passengers stared, as they would, seeing a female outside a restaurant with no clothes on dressed only in a mussel shell.”

Varcoe, a hairdresser by profession, works with Blush and owns Metamorphosis, a beauty therapy and massage business.

“Being famous in Havelock is great, but I will avoid nude shots in future,” she said.

The pin-up girls include-a new mum, volunteer fire fighter, nurse, retailer, real estate agent and publican-who have all posed for pictures which are a little naughty but not offensive.

According to ship broker Pat Copp, the brain behind the calendar, it would put a smile on faces and show Havelock’s innovative spirit and character.

The calendars will go on sale for 15 dollars each at a Pink Ribbon Breakfast at the Slip Inn on May 30, and the proceeds will go to the New Zealand Breast Cancer Foundation and Havelock Fire Service. (ANI)

Latvian police offered days off for catching grass burners

Riga- Authorities in Latvia have launched a novel incentive scheme for police in a bid to tackle the annual scourge of burning grass.

Officers who apprehend a fire starter will be entitled to an extra day’s paid holiday, Interior Minister Linda Murniece told reporters Thursday.

“We are unable to pay bonuses, but we have promised a paid day off in addition to the holiday allowance for each officer who catches a burner of old grass,” the minister said.

Every Spring brings plumes of choking smoke across the otherwise idyllic Latvian countryside as landowners burn off the remains of last year’s grass in order to encourage fresh growth.

Fires often get out of control, causing considerably more damage than originally intended and stretching the fire service’s resources. As a result the practice has been made illegal.

In future, grass burners will be made to pay the costs of putting the blazes out, Murniece added.

With the Latvian economy in a steep decline, police officers have been among public employees hit with big wage cuts and spending on government information campaigns has been slashed.

“Grass burning is a kind of Latvian tradition, but this year the government will not be able to undertake an advertising campaign telling people not to burn our land, so we chose this more radical and swift move,” an interior ministry spokesman told the German Press Agency dpa.

Now, provided they have got their handcuffs onto at least one grass arsonist, police officers will be able to sit outside enjoying the Baltic sun for an extra day – provided the neighbours aren’t burning off their old grass. (dpa)

Arson suspected in blaze at home of Roma politician

Budapest – The home of a Hungarian Roma politician was set ablaze at dawn on Tuesday in what police believe was a deliberate attack.

The attack took place in Tatarszentgyorgy, a village some 40 kilometres from the capital that was the scene of a brutal murder in February.

One room in the home of the deputy leader of the local Roma Council, Lidia Horvath, was completely burned out, the fire service said.

There was no one at home at the time as Horvath was on duty in a local Roma community guard facility set up following the February murder.

Horvath told the state news agency MTI that the Roma community in her village was living in a state of constant fear.

Peter Papp, head of the county police criminal investigations unit, said apparent arsonists had used some type of flammable substance to start the fire.

The blaze occurred a few hundred metres from the house where a Roma father and son were gunned down in February as they fled their burning home, thought to have been set ablaze by their unknown attackers.

There have been over a dozen attacks involving guns, petrol bombs and other weapons against Roma homes in Hungary over the past year.(dpa)

Man reluctantly rescued after plunging into Niagara Falls

New York, Mar 12 (ANI): A man, who jumped into the icy cold waters of the Niagara falls in an apparent suicide bid, reluctantly allowed himself to be rescued by the police and fire service crew.

It took almost 45-minutes to retrieve the man from water, who repeatedly swam with the current.

“He didn’t want to be rescued. That’s what made it so difficult. He was actually shouting at us to get away,” said Ruedi Hafen, a local helicopter pilot who runs aerial tours of the falls and helps in rescue operations.

Globe and Mail.com quoted Chief Doug Kane of Niagara Parks Police as saying that the man, who was recovering in hospital last night, scaled a retaining wall south of the falls and jumped into the swirling waters at 2:11 p.m. on Wednesday.

Shortly after, the waters carried the man over the Horseshoe Falls, one of three that make up the greater Niagara Falls. He plunged some 55 metres into the waters below, the force of impact ripping the clothing from his body.

By the time the injured man was pulled from the water, about 45 minutes had passed…He wouldn’t have lasted much longer in the ice-cold water,” Hafen said.

The man’s name won’t be released. Police believe he deliberately entered the water, and rebuffed rescue attempts. (ANI)