German zoo blaze was caused by New Year gesture gone wrong: police
Krefeld Zoo was festooned with candles and photos of the dead apes on Thursday
KREFELD:
A Chinese lantern, launched by a 60-year-old mother and her two adult daughters in a New Year's Eve celebration, caused the fire at a German zoo in which dozens of animals were killed, including eight great apes, authorities said.
Police in Krefeld, near the Dutch border, said the three women had turned themselves in on learning of the disaster, in which five orangutans, two gorillas and a chimpanzee were killed, alongside bats and birds.
The women had bought five lanterns, banned locally and in most of Germany for over a decade, on the internet, believing that they were allowed on New Year's Eve, chief investigator Gerd Hoppmann told a sombre news conference on Thursday.
"I've seen very many human corpses," Hoppmann said. "And I was struck by how like humans the bodies of the great apes looked when transformed by the fire."
The women had inscribed the lanterns, papier mache balloons lifted by the heat of the flame inside, with good wishes for the New Year.
Fire at German zoo kills dozens of animals in monkey house
Four had been found in the vicinity, while the fifth had been consumed in the zoo blaze.
"They launched the lanterns with good wishes and had no idea what could happen," Hoppmann said of the women, who could face charges of causing fire by negligence, punishable by up to five years' imprisonment or a fine.
"It was courageous of them to turn themselves in: that deserves respect," he added, saying he would give no further details about the women, since they had received threats.
The zoo was festooned with candles and photos of the dead apes on Thursday, with locals telling television stations how affected they had been by the deaths of the animals, which included Massa, a 48-year-old male gorilla.
"The pain is unbelievable," Wolfgang Dressen, director of the zoo, told public broadcaster WDR.
Department store chain Real said on Thursday that it would stop selling the lanterns, which are still permitted in the northern, coastal region of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.
A Chinese lantern, launched by a 60-year-old mother and her two adult daughters in a New Year's Eve celebration, caused the fire at a German zoo in which dozens of animals were killed, including eight great apes, authorities said.
Police in Krefeld, near the Dutch border, said the three women had turned themselves in on learning of the disaster, in which five orangutans, two gorillas and a chimpanzee were killed, alongside bats and birds.
The women had bought five lanterns, banned locally and in most of Germany for over a decade, on the internet, believing that they were allowed on New Year's Eve, chief investigator Gerd Hoppmann told a sombre news conference on Thursday.
"I've seen very many human corpses," Hoppmann said. "And I was struck by how like humans the bodies of the great apes looked when transformed by the fire."
The women had inscribed the lanterns, papier mache balloons lifted by the heat of the flame inside, with good wishes for the New Year.
Fire at German zoo kills dozens of animals in monkey house
Four had been found in the vicinity, while the fifth had been consumed in the zoo blaze.
"They launched the lanterns with good wishes and had no idea what could happen," Hoppmann said of the women, who could face charges of causing fire by negligence, punishable by up to five years' imprisonment or a fine.
"It was courageous of them to turn themselves in: that deserves respect," he added, saying he would give no further details about the women, since they had received threats.
The zoo was festooned with candles and photos of the dead apes on Thursday, with locals telling television stations how affected they had been by the deaths of the animals, which included Massa, a 48-year-old male gorilla.
"The pain is unbelievable," Wolfgang Dressen, director of the zoo, told public broadcaster WDR.
Department store chain Real said on Thursday that it would stop selling the lanterns, which are still permitted in the northern, coastal region of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.