Front Page

Gas Leak: Infant, four others burnt badly in Savar

Gas line in the house was 'unauthorised'
Herself a burn victim, a woman attends to her injured daughter as a neighbour of the family helps the baby sit in her bed at the burn unit of Dhaka Medical College Hospital. Five people, including the mother and the child, suffered burns in an explosion believed to have been caused by a gas line leak in Ashulia on Friday. Photo: Prabir Das

Five members of a family, including an infant, were seriously burned in a fire caused by leaky gas lines at their flat in Ashulia area of Savar yesterday.

The gas connection to the two-storey building was unauthorised, its owner Abdul Hamid told investigators.

The victims are Arab Ali, 60, his wife Hasina, 50, their son Abdullah, 35, his wife Ripa, 20, and their one and a half year old daughter Ayesha.

Four of the victims are in critical condition with between 32 and 96 percent deep burns, said Partha Shankar Paul, resident surgeon of burn unit of Dhaka Medical College Hospital.

A room of the flat in Ashulia where five members of a family suffered burns in a fire caused possibly by a gas line leak yesterday. Photo: Collected

Firefighters believe that the fire was caused by a leaky gas line, said Abdul Hamid, senior officer of DEPZ Fire Station.

Police have detained the building owner, said Rezaul Haque, officer-in-charge of Ashulia Police Station.

The fire broke out on the ground floor of the building in Manikganjpara around 7:00am when someone attempted to light a gas stove.

Mukta Begum, a resident of the neighbourhood, said she heard a loud bang and then saw the entire flat on fire.

“The victims were screaming for help. We rushed them to a local hospital,” she said.

The doors, windows and most of the things in the flat were damaged.

Several residents of the building alleged that gas pipes used illegally by their landlord were of bad quality.

Before he was detained by police, Abdul Hamid, the building owner, told reporters that he paid “a group of people” hefty sums for the unauthorised gas connection.

According to Bangladesh Fire Service and Civil Defence, 4,236 incidents of fire from stoves took place last year, which accounts for 23.40 percent of the total incidents.

Six residents of a building in the capital's Uttarkhan died of burn injuries after leaky gas pipes caused a fire in a kitchen on October 13.

Earlier this year, four students of Khulna University of Engineering and Technology died of burn injuries in a similar incident in Mymensingh.

Comments

Gas Leak: Infant, four others burnt badly in Savar

Gas line in the house was 'unauthorised'
Herself a burn victim, a woman attends to her injured daughter as a neighbour of the family helps the baby sit in her bed at the burn unit of Dhaka Medical College Hospital. Five people, including the mother and the child, suffered burns in an explosion believed to have been caused by a gas line leak in Ashulia on Friday. Photo: Prabir Das

Five members of a family, including an infant, were seriously burned in a fire caused by leaky gas lines at their flat in Ashulia area of Savar yesterday.

The gas connection to the two-storey building was unauthorised, its owner Abdul Hamid told investigators.

The victims are Arab Ali, 60, his wife Hasina, 50, their son Abdullah, 35, his wife Ripa, 20, and their one and a half year old daughter Ayesha.

Four of the victims are in critical condition with between 32 and 96 percent deep burns, said Partha Shankar Paul, resident surgeon of burn unit of Dhaka Medical College Hospital.

A room of the flat in Ashulia where five members of a family suffered burns in a fire caused possibly by a gas line leak yesterday. Photo: Collected

Firefighters believe that the fire was caused by a leaky gas line, said Abdul Hamid, senior officer of DEPZ Fire Station.

Police have detained the building owner, said Rezaul Haque, officer-in-charge of Ashulia Police Station.

The fire broke out on the ground floor of the building in Manikganjpara around 7:00am when someone attempted to light a gas stove.

Mukta Begum, a resident of the neighbourhood, said she heard a loud bang and then saw the entire flat on fire.

“The victims were screaming for help. We rushed them to a local hospital,” she said.

The doors, windows and most of the things in the flat were damaged.

Several residents of the building alleged that gas pipes used illegally by their landlord were of bad quality.

Before he was detained by police, Abdul Hamid, the building owner, told reporters that he paid “a group of people” hefty sums for the unauthorised gas connection.

According to Bangladesh Fire Service and Civil Defence, 4,236 incidents of fire from stoves took place last year, which accounts for 23.40 percent of the total incidents.

Six residents of a building in the capital's Uttarkhan died of burn injuries after leaky gas pipes caused a fire in a kitchen on October 13.

Earlier this year, four students of Khulna University of Engineering and Technology died of burn injuries in a similar incident in Mymensingh.

Comments

ভাগ্নেকে ১৫ দিন আগে জাহাজে নিলেন মামা, দুজনেই বাড়ি ফিরলেন লাশ হয়ে

মেঘনায় কার্গো জাহাজে ৭ জনকে হত্যার ঘটনায় আজ সন্ধ্যায় জাহাজের মালিকপক্ষ মামলা করেছে।

৫৫ মিনিট আগে