The blaze broke out Wednesday at 10:30 p.m. local time in Dhaka's Chawkbazar area, a district in old Dhaka with sprawling narrow streets and densely-packed buildings.
Throughout the night, firefighters battled the blaze, which is believed to have started when a fuel cylinder in a car exploded.
The fire then quickly spread across five buildings, including a restaurant, Ibrahim Khan, deputy commissioner of Dhaka Police told CNN.
Among the dead were customers of the restaurant who were caught in the fire, said Khan.
Inspector Morad Dul Islam from Chawkbazaar police station said that they do not yet have an estimate on the number of people injured but they are transferring them to nearby hospitals.
One of the structures served as a warehouse for a perfume company. Plastics and chemicals that were being stored to manufacture the perfume ignited in the blaze that destroyed two buildings.
Khan said the fire is now under control.
"In the morning we were able to control the fire. The fire is now over," he said.
Authorities began the process of identifying victims Thursday, as relatives waited at the Dhaka College Hospital for news of their loved ones.
"When we are able to search the whole building then we will know the exact numbers of victims," said Lieutenant Colonel Zulfikar, fire brigade director.
Built over 400 years ago, Chawkbazar is a commercial and industrial hub in the old city of Dhaka. Over the past few decades its population has mushroomed with houses and apartments built on top of warehouses and factories. over narrow, winding streets.
Electric wires hang low over the over narrow, winding streets that are filled with rickshaw drivers and vendors.
A tragic history of fires
Bangladesh has a history of fatal building fires, especially in factories where safety and structural standards have long been found to be inadequate.
Thirteen people were found guilty of gross negligence of safety measures and charged with "culpable homicide" after a November 2012 apparel factory fire on Dhaka's outskirts that killed at least 117 people and spurred others to jump from the building to escape the flames.
In 2015, 13 died in a fire inside a plastic factory near the in the capital Dhaka. Two years earlier, eight people were killed in a fire at a clothing factory in May. That October at least seven people died in another large fire that broke out at a knitwear factory.
The 2012 collapse of the eight-story Rana Plaza factory complex in Dhaka was Bangladesh's deadliest industrial disaster, killing 1,134 people.
That disaster spurred widespread criticism about the state of workers rights and safety in Bangladesh.
No comments:
Post a Comment