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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Fire craze warning for parents

Rebecca Savory
Bay of Plenty Times·
2 Sep, 2014 09:00 PM2 mins to read

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Tauranga Fire senior station officer Nigel Liddicoat. Photo / Joel Ford

Tauranga Fire senior station officer Nigel Liddicoat. Photo / Joel Ford

A Tauranga principal has issued a warning to parents in a bid to prevent a dangerous social media craze from catching on.

Teenagers in the United States have been filming themselves taking part in the social media fad called the Fire Challenge. The new craze has Tauranga emergency service professionals "horrified" and in "disbelief".

The Fire Challenge videos show teenagers dousing their bare skin in highly flammable liquids before lighting themselves on fire and then jumping into a pool or under a shower.

Other young people are filming the action and posting it online to various social media channels including YouTube and Facebook.

Painful screams can be heard from the victims as the fire spreads quickly over their bodies.

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The New Zealand Fire Service has issued a warning in late August which says many young people have already suffered horrific burns and two deaths have already been reported in the United States.

"When young survivors are interviewed, most say they didn't give much thought to the possibility of being injured or killed and they didn't realise the fire would be so intense," it states.

"Most people are not aware how difficult is it to extinguish burning flammable liquids."

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The New Zealand Fire Service said possible consequences of the trend included severe and painful burn injuries, life-time scarring on the body and face and multiple surgeries as a young person grew since burn-damaged skin did not grow.

Otumoetai Intermediate School principal Henk Popping forwarded the warning to parents and shared it on the school's Facebook page.

He hoped to warn parents of the new trend online.

"We just want to be proactive ... the last thing we want is any of our students harmed."

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Burns victim horrified by craze

04 Sep 08:22 PM

Tauranga Fire Station acting senior officer Nigel Liddicoat said he was in disbelief when he heard of the challenge.

"An accelerant is going to ignite and burn furiously ... It's the sort of activity that could go horribly wrong and end in a fatality."

St John Ambulance territory manager Ross Clarke said the challenge was horrifying.

"Once the flammable liquid has burnt, the next thing it will grab on to is hair and skin."

Mr Clarke said fire would quickly damage a person's skin and body.

"It is very quick to suffer very significant injuries. Hair is very flammable and skin and flesh burn.

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"It's horrifying. Burns are very painful and often very final."

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