Suspect arrested and charged as fire reignites at South Africa's Parliament
Firefighters battle the fire at South Africa's Parliament on Sunday.
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A
49-year-old suspect has been arrested and charged in connection to a large
fire that "gutted" South Africa's Parliament complex in Cape
Town on Sunday, according to police.
The
blaze tore through Parliament on Sunday, causing the roof of one building to
collapse and gutting the chamber of the National Assembly. On Monday, the blaze
flared up again, with dozens of firefighters sent back to once again battle the
flames, according to a statement from Parliament's presiding officers.
The
suspect, who is due to appear in the Cape Town Magistrates Court on Tuesday,
has been charged with housebreaking, theft and arson, police said in a
statement. The suspect will also be charged under The National Key Point Act,
an act that provides for the declaration and protection of sites of national
strategic importance.
The
suspect was allegedly caught with suspected stolen property after gaining entry
to the parliamentary precinct in Cape Town, and was spotted by members of the
Protection and Security Services (PSS) when they noticed the building was on
fire, police said.
The
incident and the suspect's motive are under further investigation by the Crimes
Against the State (CATS) team.
The
parliamentary complex, some of which dates to 1884, consists of a cluster of
buildings. The National Assembly, or lower house of Parliament, is in what is
known as the New Wing. The upper house, or National Council of Provinces, is
located in what is called the Old Assembly.
The
fire started in the office area of the complex before spreading to the National
Assembly chambers, according to JP Smith, a Cape Town mayoral committee member
responsible for safety and security.
Smith
told reporters Sunday that "the entire parliamentary complex is severely
damaged, waterlogged and smoke damaged."
"The
roof above the Old Assembly hall is completely gone and the offices adjacent to
it and the gym are destroyed," Smith added. "The National Assembly
chamber behind me, which you can see, is gutted, the structural ceiling has
collapsed and the fire staff had to be momentarily withdrawn."
Images
from the scene Sunday showed flames shooting out of the top of one building,
sending plumes of thick black smoke into the sky above Parliament and into
neighboring streets.
No
injuries or fatalities have been reported.

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