New Straits Times

70 KILLED IN DHAKA FIRE

Victims unable to escape as gates were chained

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AT least 70 people were killed when fire tore through crumbling apartment blocks in a historic part of the capital here, setting off a chain of explosions and a wall of flames down nearby streets, officials said yesterday.

It started in one building where chemicals for deodorants and other household uses were illegally stored and spread at lightning speed to four nearby buildings, the fire service said.

People became trapped by the flames at a nearby bridal party and a restaurant. TV images showed the gates to one building were chained, so residents were unable to escape.

Traffic jams in the clogged narrow streets held up the rescue operation.

Bangladesh fire chief Ali Ahmed said at least 70 people were killed but that the toll would likely rise.

“The number of bodies may increase. The search is going on,” he said.

Doctors said at least 10 of the scores of injured were in critical condition.

Firefighte­rs who took almost 12 hours to bring the fire under control, went through the blackened floors of the building, littered with spray cans, looking for bodies.

The fire started at about 10.40pm on Wednesday at Chawkbazar in the old Mughal part of the capital.

Ali said it may have been started by a gas cylinder and quickly spread through the building where chemicals were stored in rooms alongside the apartments.

Chemicals used for household products were also stored in the nearby buildings. They exploded as the fire spread, witnesses said.

“There was a traffic jam when the fire broke out. It spread so quickly that people could not escape,” the fire chief said.

Another fire official said the blaze was under control but was not extinguish­ed despite the efforts of more than 200 firefighte­rs.

“It will take time. This is not like any other fire,” he said, adding that the inferno had been made more devastatin­g by the “highly combustibl­e” chemicals.

Fire trucks had struggled in the narrow streets to reach the scene and there was also a lack of water for the battle, officials said.

The main gate of one fivestorey building was chained up, trapping residents inside, according to images shown on television.

Members of a bridal party in a nearby community centre were also caught in the fire and many were injured. Others were caught in small restaurant­s.

Dhaka deputy police commission­er Ibrahim Khan said at least two cars and 10 cycle rickshaws were burned in the fire.

“The victims included passersby, some people who were eating food at a restaurant­s and some members of the bridal party,” he said.

“I saw the charred body of a woman who was holding her daughter in her lap as their rickshaw was caught in the fire,” said one witness.

Haji Abdul Kader, whose shop was destroyed, said he only survived the blaze as as he had left to go to a pharmacy.

“When I was at the pharmacy, I heard a big bang. I turned back and saw the whole street, which was jam packed with cars and rickshaws, in flames. Flames were everywhere.

“I got burned and rushed to hospital,” he said.

Doctors at Dhaka Medical College Hospital said at least 55 people were injured, including 10 in critical condition.

Hundreds of people rushed to the hospital looking for missing relatives.

However, most of the bodies of the dead were charred beyond recognitio­n.

Sohag Hossain, one of the injured, told the Daily Star that he and two friends were working at a plastic factory in one of the buildings at the time of the fire.

They heard an explosion and could not escape the flames.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Flames and smoke rising from a building after a fire broke out in an old part of the Bangladesh­i capital in Dhaka yesterday.
AFP PIC Flames and smoke rising from a building after a fire broke out in an old part of the Bangladesh­i capital in Dhaka yesterday.

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