Fire in historic Dhaka district kills dozens

Fire in historic Dhaka district kills dozens

Firefighters and local people try to douse the blaze. (AP photos)
Firefighters and local people try to douse the blaze. (AP photos)

DHAKA: At least 80 people were killed when a fire tore through crumbling apartment blocks Thursday in a historic part of Dhaka, setting off a chain of explosions and a wall of flames down nearby streets, officials said.

It started in one building where chemicals for deodorants and other household uses were illegally stored and spread at lightning speed to four nearby buildings, the fire service said.

People became trapped by the flames at a nearby bridal party and a restaurant. TV images showed the gates to one building were chained up so residents were unable to escape.

Traffic jams in the clogged narrow streets held up the rescue operation.

Bangladesh fire chief Ali Ahmed said at least 80 people were killed but that the toll would likely rise.

"The number of bodies may increase. The search is still going on," he said.

Doctors said at least 10 of the scores of injured were in critical condition.

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.

The fire started at about 10.40pm local time on Wednesday at Chawkbazar in the old Mughal part of the capital.

Mr Ahmed said it may have been started by a gas cylinder and quickly spread through the building where chemicals were stored in rooms alongside the apartments.

Chemicals used for household products were also stored in nearby buildings. They exploded as the fire spread, witnesses said.

"There was a traffic jam when the fire broke out. It spread so quickly that people could not escape," the fire chief said.

Another fire official told reporters the blaze was under control but was not extinguished despite the efforts of more than 200 firefighters.

"It will take time. This is not like any other fire," he said, adding that the inferno had been made more devastating by the "highly combustible" chemicals.

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

Below: A Bangladeshi woman laments after the fire in the old part of the country's capital.

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