Nantes Cathedral fire: Arson investigation after blaze at 15th-century French church
Organ has been completely destroyed, fire chief says
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Your support makes all the difference.An arson investigation has been launched after a major fire broke out in a historic French cathedral.
The blaze blew out stained glass windows and destroyed the grand organ in the 15th-century building in the city of Nantes, officials said.
Saturday's incident is being treated as a criminal act, a prosecutor said at the scene. Pierre Sennes said three fires had been started at the site.
Images show smoke billowing from the cathedral, while a blaze lights up the building.
Residents and tourists watched aghast, and emergency workers cordoned off the area around the St Peter and St Paul Cathedral, which sits in the historic centre of the city in western France.
Dozens of firefighters brought the blaze under control after several hours.
The fire broke out inside the cathedral behind the grand organ, which was completely destroyed, local fire chief Laurent Ferlay said.
Stained glassed windows at the front of the cathedral were blown out.
Mr Ferlay told reporters on Saturday morning more than 100 firefighters were still at the site to ensure the blaze was completely under control.
However, the damage was not as bad as initially feared.
"We are not in a Notre Dame de Paris scenario. The roof has not been touched," Mr Ferlay said.
The cathedral's roof was destroyed by a fire in the 1970s, and was rebult 13 years later with a concrete structure to replace the ancient wooden roof.
"The fire of 1972 is in our minds, but at this stage the [situation] is not comparable," Johanna Rolland, the mayor of Nantes, said.
"After Notre Dame, the St Peter and St Paul Cathedral is in flames," the French president, Emmanuel Macron, tweeted on Saturday.
"Support to the firemen who are taking all the risks to save the Gothic jewel."
The blaze comes more than a year after the world watched as the Notre Dame cathedral at the heart of Paris burned in a fire which toppled its roof and spire.
Additional reporting by agencies
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