As the country heads into summer, the City of Cape Town has encouraged residents to always exercise caution with open flames, such as fires and candles.
The call comes after the City of Cape Town’s firefighters battled 48 informal structure fires, where nine people lost their lives over the weekend.
In the first incident, four people, including three minors, sustained fatal burn wounds at Manuel Street in Wallacedene in the early hours of Saturday.
At 04:40am, the bodies of a man and woman were discovered after firefighters extinguished a blaze in Bida Crescent, Victoria Mxenge.
At around 04:50pm, firefighters responded to a wendy house fire in Epping Forest, where they discovered the body of a minor beneath the debris.
On Sunday after midnight, an emergency call was received where structures were alight near Chris Hani High School in Khayelitsha.
“The fire was extinguished by 01:45 am. Two adults, genders unknown, sustained fatal burn wounds. All these incidents were handed over to the South African Police Service for further investigation,” said the city’s Mayoral Committee Member for Safety and Security, JP Smith.
Smith said the unlawful occupation of land creates a number of challenges for the city, including the city’s emergency and enforcement responses to incidents.
“Our officers are on the scene in record time but are hampered by other factors, such as access. Current legislation urgently needs to be amended to prevent the proliferation of land invasions, which exacerbates fire risks,” Smith said.
Smith said all these incidents were handed over to the South African Police Service for further investigation.
Smith has extended condolences to the families, saying that fires are devastating and traumatic for all who are involved. – SAnews.gov.za