Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

BLAZE IN ILLEGAL KOLKATA MARKET KILLS 19: OFFICIALS

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KOLKATA, Feb 27, 2013 (AFP) - A fire swept through a six-storey building housing illegal shops in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata on Wednesday, killing 19 people who were unable to flee the inferno, local officials said. Hundreds of firefighte­rs gathered at the scene of the blaze at the Surya Sen market near the railway station in the centre of the former colonial capital, where decrepit and poorly maintained buildings are vulnerable to fires.

A total of 38 people who were sleeping in the building when the blaze broke out at around 04:00 am (2230 GMT Tuesday) were rescued. Many have been transferre­d to two city hospitals for treatment.

“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,

We found dozens of people lying unconsciou­s with severe burn injuries on the floors of shops

adding that 19 corpses had been recovered.

The unlicenced 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 death toll.

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

City mayor Sovan Chatterjee said the building had “illegal constructi­on and the shops inside the building were opened without permission of the civic body”.

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

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 on Park Street which shocked the city, 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. She expressed regret at the endemic flouting of fire regulation­s and building norms in the densely populated city of 14 million.

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

 ??  ?? Firefighte­rs said it was too early to pinpoint the cause of the blaze - BBC
Firefighte­rs said it was too early to pinpoint the cause of the blaze - BBC
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