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Arson suspected in violent house fire

Police are treating a violent fire at a family home on the island of Orust in western Sweden as an act of arson.

Arson suspected in violent house fire

Six people were in the house when the fire broke out on Friday night, but at least three managed to get out, according to local police. The other three are feared dead.

The house was completely destroyed in the fire.

On Saturday morning, local police had still not managed to search the premises and they had not been able to get in touch with the people living in the house.

Peter Adlersson, spokesperson for the police in the Västra Götaland County on the west coast of Sweden, said a number of people were taken in for questioning overnight.

He added that those questioned included witnesses but said he could not confirm whether they also included residents in the burnt-down house.

The scene of the suspected arson has been under police watch overnight and remained so on Saturday morning as the fire brigade continued its work to extinguish the fire and forensic investigators searched the scene fore clues.

Orust local government councillor, Hans Pernervik, told the TT news agency that he arrived at the scene at 8pm on Friday night. He described the fire as “completely out of control” and said locals feel shaken by the event.

“It was all burning like a torch. I didn’t know a house could burn like that,” another witness, a neighbour identified as Göran, told TT.

On Saturday morning smoke was still billowing out of the remains of the house. Hans Blohm, deputy chief of rescue operations on Orust, said he expects the fire to be fully extinguished by late Saturday morning.

According to the SOS Alarm centre an injured person who was outside the house when the fire broke out has been brought to a nearby hospital.

Eight people are registered at the address, but according to the police, who have spoken to the house owner, five of them do not live there.

TT/The Local/nr

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FIRE

Situation ‘unstable’ at Copenhagen’s old stock exchange after fire

Three days after a fire which ravaged Copenhagen's historic former stock exchange broke out, emergency services said Friday that the situation was "unstable" due to equipment issues and a strong breeze.

Situation 'unstable' at Copenhagen's old stock exchange after fire

In the morning, during work to dismantle the scaffolding surrounding the building, a crane’s cutters came loose for as of yet unknown reasons.

It is currently wedged between the scaffolding — put up for the renovation of the historic building that was ongoing — and what remains of the walls.

“It is affecting our efforts”, Tim Ole Simonsen, leader of the operation at the rescue services, told a press conference.

Coupled with the wind picking up, the incident, which has temporarily halted work on dismantling the scaffolding, has made the situation “unstable”.

“The wind is blowing harder and harder, and there are tarps over the scaffolding that can catch the wind,” Simonsen said.

He added that this increases the risks, in particular of further collapse of the burnt-out facade which started collapsing late Thursday afternoon.

Located close to the Christiansborg parliament and seat of government, the Borsen building was commissioned by King Christian IV and built between 1619 and 1640. It was the stock exchange until the 1970s.

The fire began Tuesday morning under the copper roof of the building, which was undergoing renovations ahead of its 400th anniversary.

The cause of the blaze was unknown and Copenhagen police said Wednesday that a major investigation had been launched.

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