Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania: suspected arson - expert to clarify cause of fire in refugee accommodation

After the fire in a hotel in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania used as refugee accommodation, a fire expert is to clarify the cause.

Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania: suspected arson - expert to clarify cause of fire in refugee accommodation

After the fire in a hotel in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania used as refugee accommodation, a fire expert is to clarify the cause. The extinguishing operation is still ongoing, said a police spokesman on Thursday morning. The expert comes on behalf of the public prosecutor's office when the stability of the fire ruins allows it. So far, the suspicion of arson is being investigated.

On the day of the fire, the police had visited the accommodation - a hotel - because of a swastika graffiti on the entrance sign, as district administrator Tino Schomann announced. The culprit has not yet been identified.

The fire in the large thatched building in Groß Strömkendorf, where 14 refugees from Ukraine lived, broke out on Wednesday evening. Nobody got hurt. A fire alarm had gone off.

When the fire brigade arrived, employees of the facility and some passers-by were already trying to fight the fire with fire extinguishers. The entire thatched roof burned. "The roof just collapsed before my eyes. Only the outer walls are still standing," said the district spokesman. Photos published in the media showed meter-high flames and heavy smoke.

The refugees could be accommodated in other accommodations. The three workers who looked after them were also unharmed. According to initial investigations, the police estimate the property damage to be at least a higher six-digit sum. It is therefore a timber-frame building.

Mayor Tino Schmidt (SPD) was concerned. "I'm shocked and angry," so far there have been no signs of right-wing activities in the region, explained Schmidt, with a view to the still unexplained cause of the fire.

One has a very good relationship with the war refugees, said Schmidt. At times, up to 170 people from Ukraine were accommodated in the hotel. In the summer, a happy summer party was celebrated together with the refugees and the DRK, which looks after the facility. War refugees from Ukraine have been housed in the former hotel since spring. Most of them have now been taken to other accommodations by the district.

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