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Kolkata's Park Street Fire: Death Toll Rises To 24

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  • Kolkata's Park Street Fire: Death Toll Rises To 24

    KOLKATA'S PARK STREET FIRE: DEATH TOLL RISES TO 24

    NDTV.com
    http://www.ndtv.com/news/cities/major -fire-breaks-out-in-kolkata-building-many-feared-t rapped-18287.php
    March 24 2010
    India

    NDTV Correspondent, Wednesday March 24, 2010, Kolkata

    Kolkata's police commissioner Gautam Chakraborty said on Wednesday
    that the death toll in in the massive fire at Stephen Court was high
    because the gate to the roof was locked. Several charred bodies were
    found near this door, indicating that people desperately tried to
    escape but couldn't.

    He also added that the police and fire brigade personnel had faced
    difficulties in conducting rescue operations inside Stephen Court as
    they were not provided the building plan.

    "The fifth and sixth floors of the building were constructed
    illegally. These were later regularised," he told reporters, adding
    that the promoter who built the two floors was absconding after
    Tuesday's blaze.

    "We had asked the building association president for a plan of the
    building and a list of tenants, but these were not provided to us. If
    we had the list, we could have saved some more people," he said.

    An FIR will also be filed by fire department against the owner of
    the building.

    The fire at the 150-year-old building home to two of the city's
    best known restaurants - the iconic Flury's and Peter Cat - killed
    24 people on Tuesday and left about 18 injured, eight of whom are
    critical. Firemen recovered 17 bodies overnight as they went from
    door to door on the 5th, 6th and 7th floor of the building. Of the
    12 bodies identified so far, one is that of a child. At least five
    people had jumped to their death as the fire raged.

    The fire began at 2.15 pm on Tuesday. It was brought under control at
    about 10.30 pm. Initial findings suggest a short circuit or cylinder
    burst may have caused it. The fire, that may have started in a lift
    between the 5th and 6th floors soon spread upwards and sideways,
    forcing people out of windows onto narrow parapets and ledges as they
    waited to be rescued.

    Reports said at least one woman missed her step and fell five floors
    below. "We saw a lady jumping off, but she missed the AC she was
    aiming for and crashed down," an eyewitness Raja Guha, said.

    For over four hours, over 100 firemen battled the Park Street inferno
    with rescue operations hampered by lack of equipment, massive crowds
    and even traffic.

    The first four fire engines arrived at the spot soon after the fire
    started from the nearby Free School Street fire station. But they could
    do little as they did not have the equipment needed to tackle the fire.

    Meanwhile, panicky people trapped in the building tried to escape by
    climbing down rickety ladders or even a rope. Hydraulic ladders were
    needed to transport fire personnel to the higher floors where the fire
    raged, but these took more than an hour to get to the site as the fire
    engines equipped with the ladders were stored in not-so-close Behala.

    The police said some of the delays were unavoidable. "The hydraulic
    ladders which were critical to the rescue were stored in Behala. It
    takes time through Kolkata's traffic to reach from Behala to Park
    Street," said Joint Commissioner of Police Javed Shamim.

    West Bengal Minister for Fire and Emergency Services, Pratim Chatterjee
    too pointed out that in Kolkata traffic, "It takes one hour to cover
    a 15 km journey, that is why the delay took place in the fire tenders
    reaching there."

    Even as the fire raged, the blame game had begun. Trinamool leader and
    Railway Minister Mamata Banerjie, the first politician to reach the
    scene of the fire, wanted answers. "Where is the disaster management?

    There is none," she said.

    There have been fires in Kolkata before, this being the third major
    one in less than two years, but there have not been any fatalities
    before this. As the 150-year-old building built by Kolkata's Armenian
    community went up in flames, it left behind many questions. Were fire
    safety norms callously ignored? Could precious lives have been saved?

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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