A woman has been arrested and charged with arson in Queensland, Australia after she reportedly set fire to a hotel where she and her two kids were forced to quarantine for two weeks.
The blaze engulfed the top floor of the Pacific Hotel in the northeastern city of Cairns on Sunday morning, forcing an evacuation of more than 160 guests.
Australia: A 31-year-old mother of two is in custody & facing arson charges after she lit a fire underneath a bed of a Covid-19 quarantine hotel room in Cairns where she had been staying with 2 children forcing the entire building to be evacuated.
No one was injured in the fire. pic.twitter.com/TIrJNAa4Wl
— Edirin I CYBER (@Edirined) November 28, 2021
There were no injuries, but the damage to the building was “significant” and forced authorities to relocate people to other Covid-19 quarantine facilities.
Cairns hotel quarantine going well pic.twitter.com/7yhSlVsOJP
— Kel (@kellulz) November 29, 2021
Authorities said a 31-year-old woman lit a fire underneath her bed, after spending only a “couple of days” of the mandatory two-week quarantine inside the hotel after crossing to Queensland from another state. Before the incident she also reportedly had caused other unspecified troubles for the staff during her stay.
Residents of a Cairns hotel quarantine facility have been forced to evacuate this morning after a fire erupted.
No injuries were reported, however, a 31-year-old woman has been charged following initial investigations into the blaze. #9News
Full details: https://t.co/9UHNrzcWTR pic.twitter.com/ssOcZGcd1w
— 9News Queensland (@9NewsQueensland) November 28, 2021
Her two children were taken under police protection, while the woman was charged with arson and willful damage, and was due to appear in court on Monday.
Read more
Military police raid plane to arrest couple trying to flee quarantine
Over the course of the Covid-19 pandemic Australia has recorded just around 2,000 deaths as it resorted to some of the world’s most draconian lockdown and quarantine measures, affecting not only international but also interstate travel, in a bid to keep the infections as low as possible until the majority of the population is vaccinated.
Just as the country was finally preparing to reopen borders to skilled migrants and students on December 1, first cases of the new Omicron coronavirus variant were detected in travelers from southern Africa to Sydney, potentially derailing the plan.