Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Two die after inhaling toxic fumes at hotel’s waste treatment plant

- Shiv Sunny

TWO OTHER BATTLING FOR LIFE; NONE OF

THE WORKERS WERE EQUIPPED WITH ANY SAFETY GEAR, FIRE SAFETY OFFICIALS SAID

NEW DELHI: Two members of the housekeepi­ng staff of a west Delhi restaurant died and two of their colleagues are battling for their lives after going in to clean the eating joint’s kitchen waste treatment plant on Saturday afternoon, the police said.

Prima facie, the workers died of asphyxiati­on from toxic gases in the plant, Monika Bhardwaj, deputy commission­er of police (west), said. She said the workers were not provided with any safety equipment while being sent to the plant in the basement of the restaurant, Pirates Of Grill in Rajouri Garden.

The police have registered a case of culpable homicide not amounting to murder, but are yet to fix responsibi­lity for the deaths. “Once we fix the responsibi­lity of everyone involved, there will be arrests,” Bhardwaj said.

Unlike previous deaths that have occurred when workers cleaned sewers or sewage treatment plants, the police have not pressed the act meant to prohibit manual scavenging. According to the police, the act is applied to cases involving the cleaning of human excreta. In this case, it was kitchen waste being cleaned.

Repeated attempts by HT to reach the restaurant’s owners or their management for their response to the allegation­s failed.

The Delhi Jal Board said it had nothing to do with this incident.

The police identified the dead men as Rakesh Yadav, 46, and Ajay, 19. Yadav belonged to Sultanpur and Ajay hailed from Bahraich district, both in Uttar Pradesh. Their colleagues battling for their lives have been identified as Raju, 33, and Pankaj, 19.

“All four of them worked in the housekeepi­ng department of the restaurant and were sent to clean the plant,” Bhardwaj said.

“The law requires restaurant­s to treat waste from the kitchen before discarding it,” the DCP said about the need for a treatment plant in a restaurant.

According to Sandeep Duggal, assistant divisional officer, fire department, the treatment plant where the deaths took place is in the basement of the building and is about three-feet-deep, 40-feetlong and 15-feet-wide.

“It is an enclosed space where proper exit point is sealed with bricks. The only point of entry and exit is a window. You enter the tank using a ladder. There was little outlet for the poisonous gases,” Duggal, who visited the plant, said. Investigat­ors said the probe has so far revealed that initially, only one of the workers was sent into the tank.

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