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A large pre-dawn blaze tore through a coastal “water village” in Sandakan district, Sabah state on Borneo on April 19, 2026, destroying wooden stilt homes and displacing thousands.
Authorities were alerted at about 1:30 a.m.; fire chiefs said strong winds, closely packed wooden houses and low tide hampered firefighting and helped the flames spread across roughly 10 acres.
Estimates of the scale vary: the district fire and rescue chief and several international outlets reported around 1,000 homes affected and some 9,000 residents impacted, while state agency figures cited roughly 200 homes and about 445 people registered at relief centres.
No deaths were reported; several people sustained minor injuries.
Firefighters from nearby stations and tankers, using hydrants and seawater, brought the blaze under control and the area was declared a disaster zone.
The cause is under investigation, with a local report suggesting an accidental stove fire in one house.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said the federal government was coordinating with Sabah authorities to provide immediate assistance and temporary accommodation for those affected.








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