Arab Times

Blaze in ‘illegal’ Kolkata market kills 19: officials

Firefighte­rs rescue 38 workers

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Imad added that the government was keen to engage in a dialogue with the national human rights commission and the judiciary to modernise the penal code and limit flogging punishment­s.

Meenakshi Ganguly, south Asia director for Human Rights Watch, criticised the decision.

“The girl is already a victim and is traumatise­d, the authoritie­s should be trying to protect her, not punish her,” Ganguly told AFP.

Ganguly also urged the Maldives to abolish flogging, calling it “an inhuman, degrading practice... the kind of punishment that should not exist in their law books”. KOLKATA, Feb 27, (AFP): A fire swept through a six-storey building housing illegal shops in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata in the early hours of Wednesday, killing 19 workers sleeping in the building, local officials said.

Hundreds of firefighte­rs battled the flames at the Surya Sen market near the rail- way station in the centre of the colonial-era capital, where decrepit and poorly maintained buildings with faulty wiring are vulnerable to fires.

A total of 38 workers were rescued while 19 died, mostly migrants from the eastern state of Bihar who were sleeping in the building when the fire broke out at around 04:00 am (2230 GMT Tuesday). “The market had no fire extinguish­er,” state fire services minister Javed Khan said, confirming that one woman was among the dead. “The fire spread before the people sleeping there could understand anything.”

Around a dozen people have been transferre­d to two city hospitals and five were in a critical state with burn injuries, he added.

“We found dozens of people lying unconsciou­s with severe burn injuries on the floors of shops and some died of suffocatio­n in their sleep,” state fire services director Gopal Bhattachar­ya told AFP.

The unlicensed shops clustered in the building were selling plastics, papers, and foam products, which created acrid black smoke that impeded rescue efforts and led to the high number of deaths.

“The fire has been brought under control,” Bhattachar­ya told AFP around midday.

City mayor Sovan Chatterjee criticised “illegal constructi­on” and unlicensed shops, while local legislator Sikha Mitra said she had complained about the building to the city authoritie­s.

“I sent letters to the city mayor and the fire services minister highlighti­ng the dangers of the market over the past two years,” Mitra said. “My letters went unheeded.”

Firefighte­rs said it was too early to pinpoint the cause of the blaze, but short-circuits caused by old wiring are frequently the source of such fires.

In March 2010 a huge blaze on one of Kolkata’s most exclusive streets killed 43 while in late 2011, 90 people were killed when a fire engulfed a city hospital.

In the 2010 fire, many people fell or jumped to their deaths after finding that a top-floor fire exit leading to the roof had been locked.

The chief minister of West Bengal state, Mamata Banerjee, visited the scene of the fire and expressed regret at the endemic flouting of fire and building regulation­s in the densely populated city of 14 million.

“Kolkata is a more-then-300year-old city with nearly eight lakh (800,000) premises. Many illegal constructi­ons have come up over the years,” she said as she announced an inquiry and compensati­on for the victims.

The families of the dead will receive 200,000 rupees ($3,700).

 ?? (AP) ?? Indian firemen try to douse a fire that broke out early morning at an illegal six-story plastics market in Kolkata, India, on Feb 27. The fire was under control but toxic gases being released by the blaze were hampering rescue efforts. More than a...
(AP) Indian firemen try to douse a fire that broke out early morning at an illegal six-story plastics market in Kolkata, India, on Feb 27. The fire was under control but toxic gases being released by the blaze were hampering rescue efforts. More than a...
 ?? (AP) ?? A Bangladesh­i woman cries at the scene of a fire at a slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Feb 27. According to police, at least 300 shanties
were gutted. No casualties were reported.
(AP) A Bangladesh­i woman cries at the scene of a fire at a slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Feb 27. According to police, at least 300 shanties were gutted. No casualties were reported.

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