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FIRE STORM
Forest fire hits 'sacred' Philippine mountain
by Staff Writers
Manila (AFP) March 20, 2014


Chinese, Italians arrested over deadly factory fire
Rome (AFP) March 20, 2014 - Five people were detained Thursday as part of an inquiry into a fire last December that killed seven people in a Chinese-run garment factory in Italy's Tuscany region.

Two of those held were the Italians owners of the building, located in the textile town of Prato, just north of Florence.

Also held were three Chinese -- two sisters and one of their husbands -- who ran the factory, and were inside when the blaze struck, managing to escape while others were trapped by security bars across the windows.

All face charges of multiple manslaughter and exploiting illegal labour.

Eleven workers had been living and sleeping in close quarters on makeshift beds when the fire broke out.

"There are violations so serious and dangerous that it's not a question of asking what laws have been broken, but which ones were respected," prosecutor Piero Tony wrote in the arrest warrant, according to Italian media reports.

Police sequestered a second factory belonging to Giacomo and Massimo Pellegrini, worth 200,000 euros ($275,000).

Tony said the workers "laboured 14 to 16 hours a day, during the night as well, without any days off," and slept on "wooden and plasterboard mezzanines, without the minimum in terms of fire prevention or alarm systems."

Prato is officially home to about 17,000 Chinese nationals, according to official data from 2010, but local sources say the real figure is closer to 50,000.

The presence of the Chinese garment workers is not always welcomed in the city, where numerous Italian firms have been forced to shut, unable to compete.

Despite efforts to clamp down on illegal businesses and dangerous working conditions, shuttered warehouses often reopen elsewhere.

A forest fire was raging Wednesday atop a Philippine mountain, threatening endangered plants and animals in an area also considered by some local sects as a holy place, officials said.

The government's National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said about a 10-hectare (24.7-acre) patch of forest near the summit had been destroyed as of early Thursday.

In an advisory it also warned the fire near the summit of Mount Banahaw was still spreading.

Firefighters have still not reached the blaze some 18 hours after it was first observed, said municipal disaster official Elmer Bustamante.

"The area is too steep," he told AFP by telephone from the town of Sariaya at the base of the mountain, about 95 kilometres (59 miles) south of Manila.

Environment officials in the region are surveying the fire aboard military aircraft to check the extent of the damage and see how best to put it under control, Bustamante added.

The cause of the fire is unknown, he said.

Backpackers have been banned from the 2,158-metre (-foot) peak since 2004 to protect its biodiversity.

Several small sects that worship at caves and springs on its lower slopes continue to have access there, though officials said there have been no reports of anyone being trapped in the fire.

Wildlife officials of the environment department told AFP Banahaw's forests, including a 10,900-hectare protected zone, are home to scores of animal species found only in the Philippines, including a species of cloud rat discovered only in 2004.

However, they said they have yet to receive a report of the extent of the damage.

Ivan Herzano, project officer of the non-government group Foundation for the Philippine Environment, told AFP that despite access restictions, forest rangers lacked the capability to track all persons who may be illegally entering the protected area.

"Most likely it was a man-made fire," he told AFP.

Hunters illegally looking for game could have lit dry litter on the forest floor by carelessly discarding cigarette butts, he added.

The foundation has recently completed a 60-hectare reforestation project on the mountain, which has protected zones that are off limits to human habitation as well as "multiple-use zones" on its lower slopes reserved for locals, Herzano added.

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