[YT]-Xk0Vxidggs[/YT]
A fire broke out at an izakaya near Koenji station in early Sunday morning. The restaurant opens from 5:00pm to 10:00am and the blaze started just after 9:00am when a grilled used for yakitori set fire to wall and ceiling fixtures and fittings. 4 men, 2 employees and 2 customers, died from smoke inhalation while 12 are reported injured, some seriously. Police are looking at whether there is evidence of professional negligence, however, building regulations do not require such premises to have sprinklers installed. The fire brigade extinguished the fire by 10:30am.

[/floatr]Survivors of the fire that killed four people and injured 12 at the Ishikari-tei izakaya restaurant in Suginami Ward, Tokyo, on Sunday morning have recounted their desperate escape from the dreadful blaze. "I saw a pillar of fire that spread [through the restaurant] in a split second. Then the restaurant went pitch-black due to the smoke," said a 60-year-old manager of a pub in the neighborhood, who said he had been drinking at the izakaya's counter for about two hours before the blaze began at 9.10 a.m. He said the blaze broke out as a cook was grilling skewered food in front of him and quickly spread after first setting alight a decorative piece of cloth hung from the ceiling. Ishikari-tei is located on the second floor of a multitenant building in Koenji-Minami in Suginami Ward. Open from 5 p.m. to 10 a.m., it served food at low prices and was always crowded early in the morning, according to some customers. A 27-year-old man who was dining in the restaurant when the fire began said he heard people shouting, "Put it out, hurry!" and "Get out of here!"
[/floatl]Experts have cited inadequacies in fire defense legislation as an important factor behind Sunday's fatal fire. Customers have reported that the blaze started in a corner of the restaurant where an employee was grilling food and ignited cloth ornaments hanging from the ceiling. The flames then quickly spread inside the izakaya. An Asian-style tent, several decorative lanterns and a short curtain were reportedly hanging from the restaurant ceiling. Under the Fire Defense Law, items including curtains, carpets and black-out curtains must be made from flameproof materials. However, there is no specific regulation for items hanging inside facilities--including ornamental cloths. Tokyo Institute of Technology Prof. Hideki Kaji, who specializes in urban disaster prevention planning, suggested the law has fallen behind the times. "A growing number of restaurants are putting up all manner of elaborate decorations," Kaji said. "However, some types of cloth emit toxic gases when they burn. The truth is that the law can't keep up with every eventuality."