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Office building fire in Indonesian capital leaves 22 dead

Hundreds of personnel and 29 fire appliances were deployed to try to contain the blaze in Jakarta.

By contributor Associated Press Reporters
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Supporting image for story: Office building fire in Indonesian capital leaves 22 dead
Rescuers carry out the body of a victim from the site of a fire in Jakarta (Dita Alangkara/AP)

A fire has ripped through an office building in Indonesia’s capital Jakarta, killing at least 22 people including a pregnant woman.

Flames engulfed the seven-storey building, sending thick black smoke billowing into the sky and causing panic among nearby residents and workers in a neighbourhood in central Jakarta.

The fire, which broke out around midday on Tuesday, is believed to have started on the first floor of the building in the Kemayoran district before spreading to other floors, Central Jakarta police chief Susatyo Purnomo Condro said.

Indonesia Fire
Firefighters work in an office building that caught fire in Jakarta (Dita Alangkara/AP)

Hundreds of personnel and 29 fire appliances were deployed to try to contain the blaze. The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

Many workers in the building, which was used as a sales and storage office for a drone company, were out for lunch when a battery started sparking in a storage and testing area, said Mr Condro, citing several witnesses.

The fire was extinguished after three hours of intense effort. At least 22 bodies — seven men and 15 women — were recovered from the building and taken to the police hospital in East Jakarta for identification.

“It is suspected that a short circuit or thermal failure in the drone battery triggered an explosion and fire,” a survivor named Dimitri, who like many Indonesians uses a single name, told local television.

Firefighters work at an office building that caught fire in Jakarta, Indonesia
Hundreds of personnel and 29 fire appliances were deployed to the scene (Dita Alangkara/AP)

“Some colleagues on the upper floors tried to escape by moving to the rooftop while calling for help,” he added.

Television reports showed the tense evacuation of more than a dozen trapped workers, including many women, from the sixth floor using an emergency ladder extended by firefighters.

Each person had to be lowered one-by-one from the building, and several struggled to breathe due to the thick smoke while waiting for their turn.

Authorities said most of the victims died from smoke inhalation. Firefighters managed to rescue at least 19 trapped workers, some of whom suffered minor injuries, but were in a weak and traumatised condition. A police officer and a firefighter also experienced breathing difficulties.

Two people comfort one another at the site of a fire in Jakarta, Indonesia
At least 22 people were killed in the blaze (Dita Alangkara/AP)

“We will comb through the entire building again,” Mr Condro said when asked about the possible rise in the death toll.

“Firefighters are cooling down the scene because the smoke is still thick and it is not yet possible for us to enter the structure,” he said.

Families anxiously awaited news at hospitals or near the building rented by PT Terra Drone Indonesia, a company that provides unmanned aerial vehicle technology for various industrial sectors such as construction, mining, oil and gas, energy, plantations and urban planning.