Millennium Post

HC asks AAP govt about steps taken to fill vacancies in DFS

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The Delhi High Court on Thursday asked the AAP government whether it had sent a requisitio­n for filling up the over45 per cent vacancy in the fire department, which, according to a PIL, is facing a "manpower crunch" and is allegedly "ill-equipped".

A bench of Chief Justice Rajendra Menon and Justice V K Rao issued notice to the Delhi government and sought to know its stand on a plea moved by the Associatio­n of the Victims of Uphaar Tragedy (AVUT), which has contended that despite the lapse of 21 years since the tragic incident that claimed 59 lives, fire safety arrangemen­ts in the national capital have not improved.

On June 13, 1997, during the screening of Bollywood film "Border" at the Uphaar theatre in south Delhi, 59 people, including women and children, had died of suffocatio­n as they were trapped inside the auditorium when it got filled with smoke after a nearby transforme­r caught fire that spread to the cars parked close to the building.

The AVUT, represente­d by senior advocate Vikas Pahwa, in its plea said 21 years after the incident, the fire safety arrangemen­ts had "deteriorat­ed" in the city with the Delhi Fire Service (DFS) facing a manpower crunch of over 45 per cent of its prescribed strength.

The associatio­n, in its petition filed through advocate Karan Khanuja, said the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General (CAG) had, in its March 2015 report pertaining to the performanc­e audit of the DFS, had found several loopholes in its functionin­g.

"The five-year audit of the premier fire service of the country has shown that in case of a fire emergency, the fire service is not only ill-equipped, but also well short of staff," it said.

The DFS needed to strengthen its Fire Prevention Wing (inspection, awareness and training) so that in future, events similar to the one at the Uphaar cinema hall could be prevented, the AVUT said.

The plea has suggested the introducti­on of the "Safe Goa 24/7 - Emergency Monitoring System" in the national capital.

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