Tughlakabad depot a ticking bomb for locals: AIIMS team
The expert team from Delhi’s All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) that inspected Saturday’s gas leak spot in Tughlakabad area, says the residents of the area are “sitting on a (ticking) bomb”.
“We visited the container yard and the nearby areas and found it to be a heavily populated area. Those living there are sitting on a bomb, with such chemicals being handled in the vicinity,” Dr YK Gupta, head of pharmacology department, AIIMS, told HT.
Dr Gupta heads the five-member expert team that Union health minister JP Nadda created to manage the impact, soon after the gas leak was reported.
Emergency calls were received by the fire department around 7.35am about leakage of chloro methyl pyridine in the locality on Saturday. The chemical used in fertilizers, insecticides and certain drugs, is a known eye and respiratory irritant.
At least 200 girls of a nearby school were rushed to different hospitals. Most were discharged after a few hours.
“It may have been a secluded area at some point, which is why they created the yard there but now it’s advisable to move the yard to some other place as these kind of substances should not be handled in such thickly populated areas,” says Dr Gupta.
The experts also said that it would not be a bad idea to get the water and air quality of the area checked. “This chemical is toxic in nature but not fatal unless consumed in a very high dose. It is a hygroscopic substance that tends to absorb moisture from the air, liquefies and generates fumes. Unlike gases, fumes have a limited spread, which is why the effect in this case was localized,” says Dr Gupta.
The expert team of AIIMS will again visit the spot either on Monday or Tuesday.
“It is just as a measure of abundant caution that we will visit the spot again. Also, we still have beds earmarked for people who develop any complications, even though it’s highly unlikely,” says Dr Gupta.