Create your world with sifymail
Login | Register
   All about Kasab  |  Slide Shows  |   Columns  |  Calendar  |  Features  |  Education  |  Terror Map   |  STREE  |  India  |  Swine flu  |  Videos   |  Just in
Comments Share Print  |  Rate 
IANS

Army firemen fight raging Kolkata fire

2008-01-13 19:07:44

Kolkata: A team of 30 army firemen joined to fight the leaping flames of a high-rise building as Kolkata's worst fire continued to rage for the second day on Sunday at the city's biggest wholesale market, leaving one person dead of shock.

Thousands of shops and dwellings were engulfed in the fire, the most horrible in living memory, destroying property worth billions of rupees.

The blaze, which destroyed at least eight buildings, broke out at 1.15 am on Saturday in the Tirpalpatti and Nandaram complex of Burrabazar – eastern India's largest wholesale market – and continued to rage despite the efforts of 42 fire tenders aided by the army, air force and the Airports Authority of India (AAI).

A resident of Burrabazar, Tej Narayan Baidya, died on Sunday of a heart attack, as the police had to charge the angry mobs in the area with batons.

"The defence department assistance was requisitioned Saturday itself. We have entered the main building on the fire by fighting the inferno floor by floor. A team of 30 defence firemen is now fighting the blaze," defence spokesman Cap. R K Das told IANS.

"They have reached the ninth floor of the Nandalal market building," said Das.

Amid fears of the building crashing, all residents of nearby houses were evacuated.

"We fear for our fire fighting men. There is huge heat generated inside from the debris. We can hardly progress much," West Bengal Fire Minister Pratim Chatterjee said.

"There are diesel barrels inside and the generator room has caught fire," Chatterjee said.

"Army and air force personnel are also working but it is not an easy task. It will take time. I cannot say when, because I am not an astrologer," he said.

On Sunday, the fire brigade personnel were totally helpless as the fire went out of control, catching the higher floors of the Nandaram market building. They don't have enough equipment to reach the high buildings to put out the blaze.

"The fire is raging on the top floors of the Keshoram block of Nandaram market building. The building can come crashing down any moment," said a resident. A part of the building has already collapsed.

The narrow crammed lanes of Burrabazar made the fire-fighting job difficult.

There are also reports that a huge quantity of petroleum products is stored in one of the top floors of Nandaram market building. If the fire catches that floor, there could be a huge explosion, a fire brigade official said.

Traders of Burrabazar said about 2,500 shops, dealing in plastics, polythene and other inflammable materials, were gutted and losses could cross Rs 200 crore.

B D Mimani, secretary of the local trade organisation, said "99 per cent" of the traders had not insured their shops and would have to rebuild their lives from scratch.

While the buildings burned, the traders and residents wailed as they lost everything in the fire. Angry residents and traders said the fire brigade men arrived late.

Said an angry trader of Burrabazar: "This fire will never end unless the army is called out fully. Helicopters should be pressed into service. The Chief Minister should hang his head in shame for not having a disaster management system. The ruling Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPM) is holding a rally in Kolkata."

Trader Ganesh Bhagat wept as he saw the blaze. "Everything I had was in those shops. They were my future, the future of my family. What will I do now?" Bhagat lost his three stores on Jamunalal Bajaj Street, also known as Tirpalpatti because most of the shops deal in tarpaulin.

Though there was no casualty, the inadequacy of the fire fighting system was laid bare as the army, air force and the airport authorities had to be called in to control the blaze, but not with much success.

It was not clear how the early morning fire began but an electrical short circuit or sabotage is reported to be possible causes. The flames spread across the area engulfing buildings, burning markets. A thick umbrella of noxious fumes covered the sky.

Burrabazar is the wholesale market area of Kolkata with clusters of unplanned and unauthorised constructions. The fire spread fast, fanned by a breeze and helped along by inflammables material like plastics, polythene and garments.

 
 
All about: Army, Firemen, Fight, Kolkata, Fire

Comments Share Print  |  Rate  More Headlines
 

© Copyright Sify Technologies Ltd, 1998-2009. All rights reserved. India News Portal, Sify.com hosted at SifyHosting India's first Level 3 Internet Data Centre.
Site optimized for Internet Explorer 5.5 and above.
See Disclaimer | Privacy Policy & Parental Guidance on pornography | careers@sify | About Us | Feedback | Advertise