Saturday, 10 December 2011

88 choke to death - Majority of bodies of fire victims handed over

Eighty-eight patients died at Kolkata AMRI Hospitals smothered by smoke from an early on morning fire today since they were pinned for their beds by their physical immobility expecting a rescue that arrived too late with this town of unending horrors.

If you are unaware of the latest news make sure you go through Breaking News and Hot News.

The fireplace in the upper basement of an annexe building of the private hospital was spotted sometime between 2.15 and a couple of.30am, pumping smoke into the wards on the second, third and fourth floors from the AC ducts. Nearly two hours later, at 4.08am, the fireplace brigade was informed by police who received an appointment coming from a neighbour on his or her 100 emergency line - instead of through the hospital close to Dhakuria bridge Kolkata, official records show.



The entire toll in the dark stood at 90. Two nursing staff died wanting to rescue patients, some of whom forgotten marks of desperate efforts to emerge from. Tied loosely to your bed sheet, an apron lay in the super deluxe cabin around the second floor carrying evidence a shot to succeed in a barely foot-wide cornice below a shattered windowpane. Such a cabin here costs Rs 9,000 per day.

A civil defence Kolkata official working within the building, annexe 1, following your tragedy said: “The windows were sealed, the energy had been turned off, it absolutely was pitch dark inside. And, naturally, these were all patients.”

A lot of the seven-storied annexe’s 164 inmates died around the fourth floor that housed the critical patients in intensive care units. They would are already probably the most helpless, possibly dying within their beds as carbon monoxide streaming from AC vents filled their lungs.

Munmun Chakraborty, 36, who had undergone surgery on her fractured left foot, called her home at Kasba, asking to get rescued. Subhashish, her husband, said: “My wife called me at 5 and said the ward (on the second floor) had full of smoke. She cannot move and said there was no one to assist her.” Munmun can't be saved.

Police officers and neighbours from an adjacent Kolkata shanty alleged that the number of hospital staff have been on night duty fled once the fire started. But the hospital denied this: “No employee fled before the fire…. Employees happen to be courageous, saving many lives.”

More patients died than were saved for reasons a medical facility hasn't explained yet. The very first of these will be the apparent delay in calling the fireplace brigade. The hearth alarm did not sound because hospital had kept it switched off permanently on the grounds that patients tend to panic each time it is off. The top of basement the place that the fire erupted was intended as a motor vehicle park nevertheless the pharmacy store was located there. The fire department had served a notice on the hospital to clear the area, setting a deadline of December 4 which has passed without compliance.

Power was stop sometime after the fire started, plunging the wards into darkness and shutting the lift, which, a life-saver in normal times, had converted into a purveyor of death as smoke curled upwards through its shaft. The fumes from chemicals saved in the pharmacy and from paints, portable gas cylinders and diesel stocked for generators crawled the staircase too, increasing the gusts pouring out from the ducts of the centrally air-conditioned building.

In the gloom and also the smoke swirling inside rooms whose windows were sealed, the powerless patients were left to choke to death because hospital did not appear to have an evacuation plan in desperate situations. When it had one, there was nobody to implement it. This can be a hospital where daily charges begin at Rs 1,300.

Ajay Santra, 24, who was admitted with a ward about the third floor, said: “I realised I'd some thing personally. I started climbing on the stairs in great agony amid the thick veil of smoke. It was pitch dark in any case so I shut my eyes hoping they burn less. At intervals of landing, I could to secure a feeling of direction in the cries of patients.”

Police officers said the Kolkata AMRI staff - some junior doctors, nurses and technicians, administrative and security personnel - initially tried to released the fire on their own. A hearth department official speculated that “maybe the fear they hadn’t complied using the directive prompted a medical facility to never inform the fireplace brigade, instead wanting to douse the blaze”.

Local people in the shanties nearby alleged any time they experimented with go into the hospital around 3am, the main gate in the annexe was closed. We climbed the wall and scrambled as much as the scaffolding offered for construction work,” said Raju Bhandari.



Sridam Kayal, a slum-dweller who had previously been one of the first to enter a medical facility, said: “It was dark and I couldn’t see anything. Citizens were pulling my hands from each party begging to become rescued.”

Chief minister Mamata Banerjee, who reached the hospital at 9.50am, said: “Death has no consolation. Those responsible get harsh punishment.”

She announced compensation to the groups of the sufferers, arrest of the hospital’s owners and cancellation of the company's licence. A medical facility can pay a compensation of Rs 5 lakh, their state government Rs 3 lakh and the Prime Minister Rs 2 lakh to the kin in the dead.

Six directors from the Emami and Shrachi groups running the three AMRI hospitals surrendered at Lalbazar later. S.K. Todi, Ravi Todi, Prashant Goenka, Manish Goenka, Radheshyam Goenka and Dayanand Agarwal were arrested. A seventh, R.S. Agarwal, was arrested at BM Birla Heart Research Centre where he been admitted.

S.K. Todi said: “We have surrendered at Lalbazar since we now have done nothing illegal. All clearances, including that regarding the fireplace department, are along with us.”

Medical department has cancelled the licence of annexe 1, built in 2005 at a cost of Rs 120 crore.

When individuals leapt from Park Street’s Stephen Court inferno in full view less than a couple of years ago, Calcutta may have thought it absolutely was visited with the worst of possible horrors. Now it knows worse.

SHOCK AFTER SHOCK

2.15am: Three upper floors at AMRI Hospitals, Dhakuria, start completing with smoke

2.20: Fire alarms don’t are they're kept powered down, to spare the annoyance brought on by them going off each time there’s a bit smoke. The river sprinklers fail

2.30: An attendant who lives within the adjoining slum calls up her family

2.30: Fire extinguishers are pressed into action. There is however no visible fire and also the staff appear to not train when controling smoke. No one knows how to control the AC plant

2.45: About 50 people from the slum rush to the main entrance and they are averted through the guards

3.00: The slum residents cut from the barbed wire fence around the boundary wall and enter the premises

4.08: Call travels to fire brigade from your police headquarters at Lalbazar

4.15: Many hospital staff have been demonstrated to get fled

4.30: Two fire engines arrive with manual ladders with out breathing apparatus

7.00: Two skylifts come

7.30: Five breathing apparatuses arrive

8.00: A Calcutta police disaster team joins the operation, five-and-a-half hours as soon as the fire broke

9.50: Mamata arrives

10.00: Firemen stop working a part of the basement wall and initiate flooding it

2.00pm: Fire personnel enter the basement but cannot proceed due to the smoke

3.27: AMRI directors R.S. Goenka and the son Manish surrender. They may be arrested later along with S.K. Todi, his son Ravi, Prashant Goenka and Dayanand Agarwal, who also surrendered

8.30: Director R.S. Agarwal, who got admitted to BM Birla Hospital later in the day, will be the last being held. Agarwal remains in hospital, with two constables at his bedside




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