BFF-17 At least 43 killed in Delhi factory fire

217

ZCZC

BFF-17

INDIA-FIRE-ACCIDENT-3rd LEAD

At least 43 killed in Delhi factory fire

NEW DELHI, Dec 8, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – At least 43 people have died in a
factory fire in India’s capital New Delhi, with the toll expected to rise,
police told AFP.

The blaze broke out in the early hours in the city’s old quarter, whose
narrow and congested lanes are lined with many small manufacturing and
storage units.

“We… have since rescued at least 50 people,” Sunil Choudhary, New Delhi’s
deputy chief fire officer, told AFP.

They were “labourers and factory workers sleeping inside this four-or-five
storey building,” he said, adding that the fire had been extinguished but
rescue operations were ongoing.

A senior Delhi police official said eight or nine people were carried out
later, bringing the overall number rescued to at least 58.

Fire officials said it was very difficult to access the dark, poorly lit
premises in the commercial hub of Sadar Bazar.

Local news channels aired footage of firemen carrying people out of the
narrow lanes to nearby emergency vehicles.

The building was filled with school bags and packing material, fire
officials said, but cautioned that they were still unsure about the cause of
the blaze.

Monika Bhardwaj, the deputy police commissioner of Delhi’s north district
told AFP that the death toll from the incident had jumped to “43, with 16
others still admitted at the local hospitals.”

“Fire department has completed the rescue work. There are no more bodies at
the site. We don’t yet know the cause of fire but know that it was aggravated
because of plastic packing pouches, bags and other such material there,”
Bhardwaj added.

“Most who’ve died were sleeping when the fire broke out and died due to
asphyxiation,” Sadar Bazar’s assistant commissioner of police told AFP.

Many factories and small manufacturing units in big Indian cities are often
located in old, cramped quarters of the cities, where the cost of land is
relatively cheaper.

Such units often also serve as sleeping quarters for poor, mostly migrant
labourers and workers, who manage to save money by sleeping overnight at
their workplaces.

Lack of planning and lax enforcement of building and safety regulations
often leads to such deadly accidents.

“The fire in Delhi’s Anaj Mandi on Rani Jhansi Road is extremely horrific.
My thoughts are with those who lost their loved ones,” Prime Minister
Narendra Modi posted on Twitter.

“Wishing the injured a quick recovery. Authorities are providing all
possible assistance at the site of the tragedy,” he added.

Arvind Kejriwal, the chief minister of Delhi, described the incident as
“very very tragic news.”

“Rescue operations going on. Firemen doing their best. Injured are being
taken to hospitals,” Kejriwal wrote on Twitter.

BSS/AFP/GMR/1303 hrs