More than a dozen fire engines and military helicopters battled a massive fire that gutted the main building of Egypt's upper house of parliament on Tuesday and injured at least 10 people. Flames and clouds of smoke billowed in the air from the old three-storey building in central Cairo. State-run media said the cause was probably a short-circuit.
Police cordoned off the area around the building, which is close to the cabinet house, the American University in Cairo and several Western embassies. "God protect us!" Fathi Sorour, speaker of the lower house of parliament, said in a live interview on the state-run Nile News television. Sorour, who was not inside the parliament, said he feared the fire could spread to nearby buildings and urged fire-fighters to redouble their efforts.
Helicopters hovered over the river Nile to scoop water into containers suspended beneath them before flying to parliament and dumping the water over the blaze, Reuters witnesses said. More than a dozen fire engines were spraying water from hoses to put out the flames, which caused parts of the wooden ceiling on the top floor to collapse, a Reuters witness said. Ambulances were also at the scene.
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