An arsonist might have ignited a hostel blaze that killed at least six people in New Zealand’s capital, police said yesterday, as they opened a homicide investigation.
Smoke and flames engulfed the 92-room, four-story Loafers Lodge in Wellington in the early hours of Tuesday, sending residents fleeing for their lives.
Some survivors crawled through smoke to safety, while others were rescued from the rooftop by firefighters using ladder trucks.
Photo: AFP
Those who died were still in the charred building.
“I can confirm that we are treating the fire as arson,” Acting Wellington Police District Commander Inspector Dion Bennett told reporters, declining to provide additional details.
“It is being treated as a homicide investigation,” he said.
Police have a list of people they want to speak to, he added, but no one has been arrested so far.
Firefighters found six bodies inside the hostel, but said they were unable to search everywhere because the roof had partially collapsed on the top floor.
Police have said the death toll could rise.
Two hours before the blaze broke out, a couch had caught fire inside the building without being reported to emergency services, police said earlier.
Investigators were looking into possible links between the two incidents, they said.
A police reconnaissance team entered the building yesterday for the first time since it was declared safe, to look for evidence and locate the dead.
“The scene examination will be extensive and methodical and we expect it to take some time, likely several days given the large size of the building,” Bennett said.
Fire damage inside the building was “extensive,” Bennett said, with burnt debris reaching as high as 1m.
One of the survivors, Simon Hanify, said he heard a smoke alarm at the time of the couch fire, but ignored it because it often went off without reason.
When the alarm rang again two hours later, he left the burning building, he said.
“I wasn’t even going to leave my room, but I felt like a cigarette. I thought I’d go outside because I usually share them with other people,” Hanify said.
“There was smoke coming down the stairwell on the ceiling and our hallway,” he added.
“I’ve been through fire before, so I did a quick lap of our floor, knocking on doors, saying: ‘This one’s real, evacuate,’” he said.
The Loafers Lodge advertised itself as “convenient and affordable” accommodation, with laundry, kitchen facilities and a lock on each floor.
It was used as a cheap home by a mix of long and short-term residents, including some on lower incomes or those staying temporarily in New Zealand.
Many were shift workers, making it difficult to be sure of everyone’s whereabouts at the time of the blaze.
Police said that 92 people had so far been accounted for, with up to 20 yet to be tracked down.
Kehinde Sanni spends his days smoothing out dents and repainting scratched bumpers in a modest autobody shop in Lagos. He has never left Nigeria, yet he speaks glowingly of Burkina Faso military leader Ibrahim Traore. “Nigeria needs someone like Ibrahim Traore of Burkina Faso. He is doing well for his country,” Sanni said. His admiration is shaped by a steady stream of viral videos, memes and social media posts — many misleading or outright false — portraying Traore as a fearless reformer who defied Western powers and reclaimed his country’s dignity. The Burkinabe strongman swept into power following a coup in September 2022
‘FRAGMENTING’: British politics have for a long time been dominated by the Labor Party and the Tories, but polls suggest that Reform now poses a significant challenge Hard-right upstarts Reform UK snatched a parliamentary seat from British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labor Party yesterday in local elections that dealt a blow to the UK’s two establishment parties. Reform, led by anti-immigrant firebrand Nigel Farage, won the by-election in Runcorn and Helsby in northwest England by just six votes, as it picked up gains in other localities, including one mayoralty. The group’s strong showing continues momentum it built up at last year’s general election and appears to confirm a trend that the UK is entering an era of multi-party politics. “For the movement, for the party it’s a very, very big
ENTERTAINMENT: Rio officials have a history of organizing massive concerts on Copacabana Beach, with Madonna’s show drawing about 1.6 million fans last year Lady Gaga on Saturday night gave a free concert in front of 2 million fans who poured onto Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro for the biggest show of her career. “Tonight, we’re making history... Thank you for making history with me,” Lady Gaga told a screaming crowd. The Mother Monster, as she is known, started the show at about 10:10pm local time with her 2011 song Bloody Mary. Cries of joy rose from the tightly packed fans who sang and danced shoulder-to-shoulder on the vast stretch of sand. Concert organizers said 2.1 million people attended the show. Lady Gaga
SUPPORT: The Australian prime minister promised to back Kyiv against Russia’s invasion, saying: ‘That’s my government’s position. It was yesterday. It still is’ Left-leaning Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese yesterday basked in his landslide election win, promising a “disciplined, orderly” government to confront cost-of-living pain and tariff turmoil. People clapped as the 62-year-old and his fiancee, Jodie Haydon, who visited his old inner Sydney haunt, Cafe Italia, surrounded by a crowd of jostling photographers and journalists. Albanese’s Labor Party is on course to win at least 83 seats in the 150-member parliament, partial results showed. Opposition leader Peter Dutton’s conservative Liberal-National coalition had just 38 seats, and other parties 12. Another 17 seats were still in doubt. “We will be a disciplined, orderly