
A
firefighter works on a roof of a wooden building while a fire ravages
ancient Dukezong town in Shangri-la county, in southwestern China's
Yunnan province, Saturday Jan. 11, 2014. The 10-hour inferno has razed
the ancient Tibetan town in the province that's popular with tourists.
(AP Photo)
BEIJING (AP) — A fire that
raged for nearly 10 hours Saturday razed an ancient Tibetan town in
southwest China that's popular with tourists, burning down hundreds of
buildings as fire engines were unable to get onto the narrow streets,
state media and witnesses said.
There was no
immediate report of casualties, and the cause of the fire was unclear.
State media, citing local authorities, said the blaze started in a
guesthouse and was ruled accidental.
The fire broke out at 1:27
a.m. in the ancient Tibetan quarter of Dukezong, which dates back more
than 1,000 years and is known for its preserved cobbled streets, ancient
structures and Tibetan culture. It is part of scenic Shangri-La county
in Deqen prefecture.
Once
called Gyaitang Zong, the county in 2001 renamed itself Shangri-La,
hoping to draw tourists by the reference to the mythical Himalayan land
described in James Hilton's 1933 novel. Like hundreds of Chinese cities
and counties, Shangri-La renovated its old neighborhood, Dukezong,
turning it into a tourist attraction filled with shops and guesthouses.
Photos and video footage showed Dukezong and its labyrinth of houses engulfed in flames that turned the night sky red.The fire destroyed about 242 houses and shops in Dukezong, dislocated more than 2,600 people, and torched many historic artifacts, the official Xinhua News Agency said.
He Yu, a resident, said she woke to loud, explosion-like sounds to find the old town on fire.
"The fire was huge," she said. "The wind was blowing hard, and the air was dry. I was scared because my home is a little distance away from the ancient town. It kept burning, and the firefighters were there, but there was little they could do because they could not get the fire engines onto the old town's narrow streets."
With fire engines kept out, local residents lined up to pass buckets of water to combat the fire, the Deqen prefecture government said.
Most of the buildings were made of wood and the fire spread easily because of dry weather, state-run China Central Television said.
More
than 2,000 firefighters, soldiers, police, local officials and
volunteers responded to the blaze and brought it under control at around
11 a.m., the Shangri-La county government said.
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