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A fire engine stands by the site of a fire in an alleyway, tangled in electrical wire and too narrow for vehicles to access, in New Delhi on Dec 8, 2019. (Photo: AP/Manish Swarup)

Firemen hailed as heroes in Delhi horror blaze

NEW DELHI: Two firemen who rescued 27 people were hailed as heroes Monday (Dec 9) after Delhi's deadliest fire in decades killed 43, prompting outrage that safety regulations were yet again ignored.

The blaze early Sunday ripped through a four-storey building housing small factory units in the congested lanes of the Old Delhi district while the migrant workers inside were asleep.

Fire fighter Rajesh Shukla, who carried out 11 people and was injured in a dangerous and difficult operation in the area's narrow lanes, said he was shocked so many people were inside.

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The walls of a building stand blackened after it caught fire in New Delhi on Dec 8, 2019. (Photo: AP/Dinesh Joshi)

"No one in the area informed us that so many people were there in the building, some said there were three or four people trapped inside," Shulka told the Times of India daily.

"I saw at least 30 people in the room (on the third floor) with most of them sleeping. A few others were dead ... We were told that the labourers slept in shifts," he said.

READ: Screams, goodbyes as at least 43 die in devastating India factory fire

On Monday, charred walls and smoke-blackened windows bore a grim testimony to the tragedy that unfolded at the cramped premises.

Locals told AFP that all illegal factories in the area pull down and lock their shutters at night, which gives workers time to flee if police raid the premises.

"But this time it proved fatal for them as a lot of precious time was lost in trying to enter the building," a local resident said, as officials from the electricity department arrived at the scene.

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Mukhtar Alam, who lost his relative in a fire, cries as he waits for the body outside a mortuary in New Delhi on Dec 8, 2019. (Photo: AP/Manish Swarup)

"LOST EVERYTHING"

Firefighter Ashish Malik, who managed to carry out 16 people from the blazing building, said they "had to take huge risks" carrying people down the only staircase on a rickety floor.

"We rescued workers by carrying them on our shoulders. Some had to be dragged," he said.

Zameel Ahmed, who lost two of his sons aged 32 and 34 in the inferno, was inconsolable.

"Five of my grandchildren have lost their fathers. We have lost everything."

Hardeep Singh Puri, Indian housing and urban development minister, hit out at the Delhi state government for allowing the owners of the building to operate with "impunity".

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Medical officers and policemen come out from the site of a fire in an alleyway in New Delhi on Dec 8, 2019. (Photo: AP/Manish Swarup)

The lanes were narrow and congested with wires and cables dangling dangerously, he said in a statement, adding the building flouted safety and fire norms.

"If all these (city) departments had done their job properly then many valuable lives could have been saved," he said.

Police said the owner of the building and its manager have been arrested and that the illegal factory units inside had been operating without fire safety clearance.

One of the units manufactured wall mirrors, one was involved in the stitching of schoolbags and another stitched skull caps, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.

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An ambulance makes its way towards the site of a fire that swept through a factory where laborers were sleeping, in New Delhi, India December 8, 2019. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi

Such firms often provide sleeping quarters for poor workers, mostly migrants from elsewhere in India who save money by bedding down at their workplaces.

Some were paid just 1,000 rupees (US$14) a month.

Locals said the building, which also made purses and jackets, had just one entrance. Twenty rooms on each floor were connected by a single internal stairway.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted that the fire, the deadliest in Delhi since 59 people perished in a burning cinema in 1997, was "extremely horrific".

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Map locating a bag factory at Sadar Bazar in the Indian capital New Delhi where a fire killed at least 43 people on Dec 8, 2019. (Graphic: AFP/Jonathan Walter)