China Daily (Hong Kong)

Fire kills 27 in New Delhi, two arrested

- AGENCIES—XINHUA

NEW DELHI — Police arrested two owners of a company that manufactur­es and sells security cameras after a massive fire reportedly started in their office in a fourstory commercial building in the Indian capital, killing 27 people and injuring 12 others, police and fire officials said on Saturday.

The police registered a case of culpable homicide not amounting to murder and a criminal conspiracy that is punishable with life imprisonme­nt or 10 years in jail.

The building had no clearance from the fire department and it was not equipped with fire safety equipment such as extinguish­ers, said Atul Garg, director of Delhi Fire Services.

Garg said the fire started on the first floor of the building on Friday evening and spread quickly to other areas where inflammabl­e plastic material used to manufactur­e equipment, including security cameras, and a large quantity of cardboard used for packaging was stored.

All 27 bodies were recovered from the second floor where people attending a motivation­al meeting were engulfed in the fire.

Only seven of the 27 dead bodies recovered could be identified as of Saturday evening, Xinhua reported. As many as 29 people have been reported missing after the incident.

At least 50 people were rescued from the building, which contains mainly shops. The building is located in the Mundka area in western New Delhi.

Fires are common in India, where building laws and safety norms are often flouted by builders and residents, The Associated Press reported. In 2019, a fire caused by an electrical short circuit engulfed a building in New Delhi and killed 43 people.

Best wishes for survivors

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he was saddened by the loss of lives and wished for the speedy recovery of the 12 injured who have been hospitaliz­ed.

Harish Goel and his brother Varun Goel were first detained for questionin­g and later arrested, the

Press Trust of India reported, citing police officer Sameer Sharma.

Sachin Garg, a resident in the area, said the building had only one exit door, and people trapped there found it difficult to leave quickly because of a crush. “They called ambulances, and fire officials used crane buckets to rescue people,” he said.

Satbir Lakra, another resident, said several men and women smashed glass walls and jumped to the ground floor.

The building is located in a congested area with industrial units and the fire engines took time to reach the scene.

Twenty-seven fire engines doused the flames after battling for more than five hours. A search operation continued overnight to look for anyone trapped in the rubble.

The cause of the fire was not clear and was under investigat­ion. Some said the fire started after an explosion in an air conditione­r, while others said it was triggered by an electrical short circuit.

 ?? SAJJAD HUSSAIN / AFP ?? National Disaster Response Force personnel in New Delhi on Saturday clear debris from a burned floor of a commercial building a day after a fire broke out.
SAJJAD HUSSAIN / AFP National Disaster Response Force personnel in New Delhi on Saturday clear debris from a burned floor of a commercial building a day after a fire broke out.

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