INA- Sources
A powerful gas explosion damaged a building in Paris' Left Bank on Wednesday, injuring more than two dozen people and sparking a large fire, authorities said.
There were a total of 37 people injured, French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said on France's national BFM TV network. Four people were in "absolute emergency" and 33 were "relatively injured."
Two people are still missing, and the rubble of the damaged building is being searched, Darmanin said. There were 320 firefighters and 200 policemen on site.
Fire officials did not immediately confirm the district mayor's statement that the explosion was caused by a gas leak, but witnesses reported smelling gas in the area before the blast.
Witnesses told BFM and other outlets the blast had seriously damaged a building housing the Paris American Academy language school. BFM said it was unclear whether the initial blast had struck the academy or a neighboring building. Officials told CBS News that the blast had "weakened" neighboring buildings.
"Because it was a Wednesday afternoon, the children were not in class, which most probably avoided more casualties," Darmanin said on BFM.
About 20 families who lived in the building or in two neighboring buildings will be rehoused, officials told Le Parisien, a French daily newspaper.
French news outlets said multiple buildings in the vicinity caught on fire after the explosion. Images from the scene showed firefighters appearing to have control of the blaze.
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