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A large fire is raging at the Houses of Parliament in the South African city of Cape Town.
Video footage shows a plume of black smoke filling the sky, with huge flames coming out from the roof of the building.
Dozens of firefighters are at the site battling the blaze; it is not yet clear what caused the fire.

Officials said the fire started on the third floor offices and quickly spread to the National Assembly (the parliament's lower house) chamber, reports the BBC's Nomsa Maseko in Cape Town.
No injuries have been reported and there's no indication of what may have started it, our correspondent adds.
Fire and rescue service officials said it could take another four hours to put the fire out completely because of the carpets and wooden floors in the building.
The minister responsible for government infrastructure, Patricia de Lille, earlier said the fire in the Chamber of the Council of Provinces (the upper house) had been contained, but the National Assembly was still burning:
[WATCH] "Currently, the fire is in the National Assembly chambers"- Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure Patricia de Lille tells the media.
— Newzroom Afrika (@Newzroom405) January 2, 2022
Tune into #Newzroom405 for more developments on this story.
Parliament pic.twitter.com/DXY2WI0icz

A member of the Cape Town mayoral committee for safety and security, JP Smith, told reporters the roof had partially collapsed and that the fire detection alarm did not sound at the start of the fire:
"The roof of the building has collapsed on the one side and the fire has spread to the new assembly, according to the officers.
"They've detected large cracks in the wall, which is of concern.
"The firefighters report that they were on scene for some time before the fire detection system first triggered and then sounded the alert. So it does appear that that system was somewhat delayed."

The parliament is not currently in session because of the holidays.
The Houses of Parliament in Cape Town are made up of three sections, with the oldest dating back to 1884. The newer sections built in the 1920s and 1980s house the National Assembly.
Last year, a fire ravaged part of the University of Cape Town's library, which was home to a unique collection of African archives.

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