Chile accuses volunteer firefighter and ex-forestry official with causing huge fire that killed 137
UNB
Publish: 26 May 2024, 07:35 PM
SANTIAGO,
Chile, May 26 (AP/UNB) - A Chilean judge on Saturday ordered a volunteer
firefighter and a former forestry official detained for allegedly planning and
causing a mammoth forest fire in the Valparaiso region that caused 137 deaths
and made 16,000 people homeless in February.
The court in Valparaiso
ruled the two men, who were arrested Friday, could be held for 180 days while
they are investigated.
The chief prosecutor in
the case, Osvaldo Ossandon, told journalists that the main suspect is Francisco
Mondaca, a 22-year-old volunteer firefighter in Valparaiso who is accused of
physically starting the fire. He said flares and fireworks were found in
Mondaca's vehicle.
The other suspect was
identified as Franco Pinto, a former employee of the National Forest
Corporation. He is accused of planning the crime.
The regional prosecutor
for Valparaiso, Claudia Perivancich, said investigators have evidence the two
men agreed "in advance to carry out conduct of this type when the weather
conditions were adequate."
Prosecutors said that
according to Mondaca's testimony, there was an economic motive behind the plot
- providing more work in fighting fires. They said they had not ruled out the
possibility of more people being involved.
The commander of the
Valparaiso Fire Department, Vicente Maggiolo, said, "We are very dismayed
by the situation."
Maggiolo called it an
isolated incident and said it should not tarnish the work of the fire
department. "We have been saving lives for more than 170 years," he
told TVN.
Christian Little,
executive director of the forestry department, described the detention of a
former official as "a pain" for the agency.
Both the fire department
and forestry agency said they would tighten hiring procedures.
The megafire began Feb.
2 in the Lago Penuelas nature reserve, in the central region of Chile, and for
several days burned several communes, including destroying more than 10,000
homes. It is considered Chile's worst tragedy since a magnitude 8.8 earthquake
killed more than 500 people on Feb. 27, 2010.
END/UNB/AP/PR
