Flames engulf a building at South Africa's Parliament in Cape Town Sunday Jan. 2, 2022. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
Flames engulf the roof of South Africa’s Parliament in Cape Town (Picture: AP)

A huge fire has erupted at South Africa’s Parliament sending dark plumes of smoke into the sky above Cape Town.

The fire broke out on the third floor of an office building and spread to the National Assembly, where MPs sits.

Minister Patricia de Lille said: ‘The fire is currently in the National Assembly chambers. This is a very sad day for democracy for Parliament is the home of our democracy.’

No injuries were reported as 35 firefighters battled the blaze, believed to have started at 6am.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and many high-ranking politicians were in Cape Town for Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s funeral, which took place nearby at St George’s Cathedral on Saturday.

Ms De Lille confirmed the fire crews now ‘have the situation under control’.

Firefighters are seen on a ladder of a fire engine as smoke billows from the roof of a building at the South African Parliament precinct in Cape Town on January 2, 2022, during a fire incident. (Photo by Marco LONGARI / AFP) (Photo by MARCO LONGARI/AFP via Getty Images)
Firefighters use to tackle the blaze from above (Picture: AFP)
Smoke rises after a fire broke out at the Parliament in Cape Town, South Africa, January 2, 2022. REUTERS/Sumaya Hisham
The fire spread to the National Assembly building (Picture: Reuters)
A fire burns at the Houses of Parliament, in Cape Town, South Africa, Sunday, Jan. 2, 2022. The country's minister of public works and infrastructure said Sunday's fire started on the third floor of a building that houses offices and spread to the National Assembly building, where South Africa's Parliament sits. (AP Photo/Leon Knipe)
Thick black smoke and flames erupt from the Parliament building (Picture: AP)
A plume of smoke arises above the Houses of Parliament, behind the St. George's Cathedral, in Cape Town, South Africa, Sunday, Jan. 2, 2022. Firefighters have been deployed and the cause is unknown. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
Table Mountain and the Cape Town skyline can be seen behind the smoke (Picture: AP)

It was feared parts of buildings, first built in the late 1800s, might collapse due to the heat.

‘The bitumen on the roof is even melting, an indication of the intense heat. There have been reports of some walls showing cracks, which could indicate a collapse,’ fire service spokesman Jermaine Carelse said.

The Parliament complex was cordoned off as police closed roads and blocked-off areas where people had left flowers and other tributes to Tutu.

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