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Fire nearly destroys Unesco-recognised Japanese castle

Shuri Castle is a symbol of Okinawa’s cultural heritage from the time of the Ryukyu Kingdom.

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Japan Castle Fire

A fire has broken out in a historic castle on Japan’s southern island of Okinawa, nearly destroying the Unesco World Heritage site.

The blaze broke out early on Thursday and spread quickly through Shuri Castle.

Firefighters battled the blaze for about 12 hours before bringing it under control in the afternoon.

The fire in Naha, the prefectural capital of Okinawa, started in the castle’s main structure and quickly jumped to other buildings. Three large halls and four other structures burned down, a fire official said.

No one was injured. The cause is not yet known.

An annual castle festival that began on Sunday was to run for a week but remaining events have been cancelled.

Video on NHK public television showed parts of the castle engulfed in orange flames, then turning into a charred skeleton and collapsing to the ground.

Japan Castle Fire
Smoke and flames rise from Shuri Castle (Okinawa Times/Kyodo News/AP)

Many residents watched from a hillside road and quietly took photos to capture what was left of the castle before it was largely lost. Some people were crying.

“I feel as if we have lost our symbol,” said Naha mayor Mikiko Shiroma, who led an emergency response team. “I’m shocked.”

Okinawa governor Denny Tamaki cut short a trip to South Korea to return to Naha. “My heart is broken,” he said. “But I also feel strongly that we must reconstruct Shuri Castle, a symbol of the Ryukyu Kingdom filled with our history and culture.”

Japan Castle Fire
People watch as the castle burns (Jun Hirata/Kyodo News/AP)

The castle is a symbol of Okinawa’s cultural heritage from the time of the Ryukyu Kingdom that spanned about 450 years from 1429 until 1879, when the island was annexed by Japan.

It is also a symbol of Okinawa’s struggle and efforts to recover from the Second World War. The castle burned down in 1945 during the Battle of Okinawa near the end of the war, in which about 200,000 people died on the island, many of them civilians.

The castle was largely restored in 1992 as a national park and was designated a Unesco World Heritage site in 2000 as part of a group of ancient ruins, castles and sacred sites that “provide mute testimony to the rare survival of an ancient form of religion into the modern age”.

Japan Castle Fire
Firefighters try to extinguish the blaze (Jun Hirata/Kyodo News/AP)

Chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters that the central government will do its utmost to reconstruct the castle.

The government dispatched officials from the Agency for Cultural Affairs and other government organisations to join efforts to investigate the cause of the fire and study ways to protect other historical sites from disasters, Mr Suga said.

Kurayoshi Takara, a historian at the University of the Ryukyus who helped reconstruct Shuri Castle, said he was speechless when he saw the fire.

He told NHK that the castle reconstruction was a symbolic event for Okinawans to restore their history and Ryukyu heritage lost during the war.

“I still can’t accept this as a reality,” Mr Takara said. “It has taken more than 30 years and it was a monument to the wisdom and efforts of many people. Shuri Castle is not just about the buildings, but it reconstructed all the details, even including equipment inside.”

Japan Castle Fire
An aerial view of the burnt-out main temple (Kyodo News/AP)

Unesco director general Audrey Azouley expressed her sympathy. “Deep emotion and sincere solidarity with the Japanese people as we see the tragic fire at the beautiful #shuricastle,” she wrote on her Twitter account. “This is a loss for all humanity.”

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