The National - News

Dubai Creek blaze visible ‘for miles’

One sailor taken to hospital after dhows catch fire

- Ramola Talwar Badam

DUBAI // Part of Dubai Creek was engulfed in smoke and flames yesterday afternoon after three dhows caught fire.

Tyres, blankets, plastic items and boxes of food – all on the jetty – were among the items caught up in the blaze.

One sailor was treated at Rashid Hospital for first-degree burns and smoke inhalation, and three firefighte­rs were treated at the scene for dehydratio­n.

No serious injuries were reported, although all three boats, which were to take their cargo to Iran, were destroyed.

It took eight teams on shore and three specially equipped boats almost three hours to bring the fire under control. Flames could be seen from miles away, with those close to the scene clambering on to other boats along the wharf to see the smoulderin­g and charred remains of the dhows.

“It is a very good thing that there were no serious injuries,” said Lt Col Rashid Al Buflaseh, Civil Defence general director office manager.

“The fire spread because of multi-cargo on the shore.

“There was plasticwar­e that easily ignites, refrigerat­ors with small compressor­s, paper, tyres and many electrical items.”

Informatio­n about the fire reached authoritie­s at 3.04pm after which teams were dispatched, the colonel said.

The injured men were stable, he added. “The man from the boat was vomiting and was take by ambulance to hospital. He was checked, treated and is stable. The other men had lost fluid because of fasting.”

As the flames raged, worried owners gathered on the dock, standing amid cartons of almonds and cashews, and boxes filled with water-pump equipment. Some watched in despair as their livelihood­s went up in smoke.

“I have lost everything, nothing is insured,” said Faraz, who estimated he had lost Dh600,000 worth of merchandis­e, including refrigerat­ors and batteries.

“I’m in tension. I don’t know what to do. Everything is gone.”

Another trader said he had lost a shipment of blankets. “The boat was supposed to leave today but now everything, all the blankets, are gone,” said Mustafa, who found himself in the same situation as Faraz.

“It was a container load of blankets we had on the boat. Nothing was insured.”

Officials said an estimate of losses would begin once the area was secured.

The length of time required to put out the fire was determined by the different types of equipment required, officials said. “One boat was a wooden dhow and the other was a fibreglass boat, so we had to use water for one and the other we had to use a different chemical material with foam to stop the fire,” said Lt Col Ali Al Muttawa, director of the operations department at Civil Defence and the head of yesterday’s operation. “The fire spread very fast on the boats and to the cargo on the platform.”

After the fire was contained, the wharf loading area was cooled and rechecked to prevent stray embers from reigniting material in the loading bay, officials said.

In March 2013, a generator was believed to be behind a blaze at the creek that destroyed two dhows. The fire started on one of the traditiona­l wooden boats, moored near Al Jadaf dockyard for repairs, before spreading to the other vessels.

It took more than 40 firefighte­rs, on land and in specialist boats, about an hour to contain the blaze, which burnt for several hours.

Just over two months later another dhow, which had just left the creek en route to Iran, went up in flames. Port authority officers said the probable cause was eroded electrical wires.

An investigat­ion into the cause of yesterday’s fire is being carried out by Dubai Police.

Traffic flow to and from the creek was not affected.

I’m in tension. I don’t know what to do. Everything is gone

Faraz boat owner

 ??  ?? Government of Dubai Media Office
Government of Dubai Media Office
 ?? Courtesy Government of Dubai Media Office ?? Three dhows, said to be carrying hundreds of thousands of dirhams worth of goods, burn on Dubai Creek.
Courtesy Government of Dubai Media Office Three dhows, said to be carrying hundreds of thousands of dirhams worth of goods, burn on Dubai Creek.
 ?? Satish Kumar / The National ?? Smoke billows out across the pier as firefighte­rs tackle a boat fire in Dubai Creek.
Satish Kumar / The National Smoke billows out across the pier as firefighte­rs tackle a boat fire in Dubai Creek.

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