Montreal (AFP) - A fire that
ravaged a Quebec retirement home may have killed up to 32 people,
authorities said Saturday as they resumed their somber search for bodies
in the bitter cold.
The blaze at
the 52-unit residence in the small town of L'Isle-Verte, 450 kilometers
(280 miles) northeast of Montreal, broke out just after midnight
Thursday.
Within about an
hour, the wood-frame, three-floor building was completely engulfed in
flames, fanned by frigid winds of up to 70 kilometers (43 miles) per
hour.
"The total number of people missing is 32, of which we can confirm eight deaths," Quebec provincial police spokesman Guy Lapointe told reporters.
Two of the eight remains have been identified, said Quebec coroner's office spokeswoman Genevieve Guilbault. Families of the presumed victims have provided DNA samples and medical records to facilitate the process.
Brutally
cold temperatures dipping to minus 30 degrees Celsius (minus 22 degrees
Fahrenheit) that have blanketed the site with ice hampered efforts to
recover the possible 24 remaining bodies.
In parts, the layer was 60 centimeters (24 inches) thick, Lapointe said.
Faced with these conditions, relief workers have brought equipment to the scene that is normally used to de-ice boats.
Investigators have yet to identify what caused the deadly inferno in the French-speaking Canadian province.
Radio-Canada
reported that a cigarette was to blame, saying one of the residents lit
up in his room rather than going to the designated smoker's area.
But Lapointe stressed: "that's one hypothesis among several."
Officials
have said the building met safety codes but initial indications suggest
the oldest part of the building, constructed in 1997, was not equipped
with an automatic fire sprinkler system.
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