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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Shock as Dhaka fire leaves 70 dead

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DHAKA: Fire and explosions that ripped through apartment buildings packed with illegal chemical stores killed at least 70 people in the Bangladeshi capital which was left stunned by its latest disaster.


The inferno started in a building where chemicals for deodorants and other household uses were stocked amid apartments. It spread at lightning speed to four nearby blocks, the fire service said.


Chemical fireballs set ablaze the clogged narrow streets even engulfing passengers on rickshaws in flames. Witnesses told of harrowing scenes as people became trapped by flames at a bridal party and in restaurants.


Bangladesh fire chief Ali Ahmed gave a death toll of 70. Doctors said at least 10 of the scores of injured were in critical condition.


Hundreds of firefighters who took almost 12 hours to bring the fire under control went through the blackened floors of the building, littered with spray cans, looking for bodies.


“We found 24 bodies in one corner of a building and another nine bodies at a pharmacy where the shutters were down,” firefighter Shariful Islam said.


“They thought they would survive by bringing down the shutters.” The fire started late on Wednesday night in the Chawkbazar trading district in the old Mughal part of the capital.


Ahmed said it may have been started by a gas cylinder and quickly spread because of the chemicals stored in rooms alongside the apartments.


Authorities promised a crackdown after a similar blaze in 2010, in an old Dhaka building also used as a chemical warehouse, that killed more than 120 people. But no effective action was taken, according to critics.


“After the warehouse owners, the city corporation and the law enforcers are mainly to blame for this,” said Abu Naser Khan, head of the POBO citizens lobby group.


Chemicals were also stored in the nearby buildings which exploded in a chain as the fire spread.


“It spread so quickly that people could not escape,” the fire chief said.


Fire trucks had struggled in the narrow streets to reach the scene and there was a lack of water for the battle, officials said.


The main gate of one five storey building was also chained up, trapping residents inside. — See page 5


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