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Bangladesh fire: hundreds of firefighters tackle blaze in huge Dhaka clothing market Bangladesh fire: 600 firefighters tackle blaze in huge Dhaka clothing market
(about 7 hours later)
Bongo Bazar market and three adjacent commercial precincts said to be almost completely gutted Bongo Bazar and three adjacent markets said to be gutted, as 11 people reported injured
Hundreds of firefighters have been mobilised in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, to battle a huge fire that raged through a popular clothing market and blanketed the city’s oldest neighbourhoods in black smoke. Hundreds of Bangladeshi firefighters have battled an inferno that raged through a popular clothing market in the capital, Dhaka, and covered the city’s oldest neighbourhoods in black smoke.
No casualties from the Tuesday morning blaze have been reported yet. Shop owners and fire officials told reporters that the Bongo Bazar market and three adjacent commercial precincts had been almost completely gutted. No deaths have been reported, but shop owners and fire officials told reporters that the famous Bongo Bazar and three adjacent markets had been gutted in the dawn fire.
“Some 600 firefighters ... are working to bring the fire under control,” fire department spokesman Rakibul Islam told AFP, adding that the blaze began around dawn. Tempers flared as the morning wore on, with a group of shop owners hurling rocks at firefighters, angered by the time it was taking to bring the blaze under control.
A military spokesman said in a statement that an air force helicopter had joined the firefighting effort. “We dispersed them,” said a police spokesperson, Faruq Ahmed, adding that about 450 officers had been deployed to keep order and stop looting.
Aerial footage from the helicopter showed hundreds of people watching the fire from a nearby overpass. The fire services heaad, Main Uddin, told reporters that 600 firefighters from across the city had brought the blaze under control after battling it for more than six hours, while hundreds of people watched from a nearby overpass. “An enthusiastic crowd and a lack of water” along with high winds had made it difficult to combat the fire, he said.
The market is a popular destination for cut-price western fashion brands such as Tommy Hilfiger, selling clothes that were produced in the city’s garment factories but failed to meet export standards. Uddin added that Bongo Bazar, built mainly from timber and tin to house hundreds of small stalls, had been designated a fire risk in 2019 and had been repeatedly issued warning letters since then.
Distraught shop owners told reporters the blaze had left them destitute ahead of Eid, the Muslim festival marking the end of Ramadan and the country’s biggest religious celebration. Police inspector Bacchu Mia said at least 11 people had been injured in the fire, including five firefighters, but that none were in a critical condition.
“I borrowed 1.5m taka ($14,100) to buy Eid clothing,” one business owner said. “I’ve lost everything.” Owners said the four markets housed thousands of clothing shops in one of Dhaka’s busiest precincts, home to its most prestigious university and the national police headquarters.
Built in the 1980s, Bongo Bazar is a popular destination for cut-price western fashion brands such as Tommy Hilfiger, selling clothes that were produced in the city’s garment factories but failed to meet export standards.
Distraught shop owners told reporters the blaze had left them destitute before Eid, the Muslim festival marking the end of Ramadan and the country’s biggest religious celebration. “I borrowed 1.5m taka ($14,200) to buy Eid clothing,” one business owner said. “I’ve lost everything.”
Building fires and explosions caused by leaking gas cylinders, faulty air conditioners and bad electrical wiring are frequent in Bangladesh.
Last month, at least 23 people were killed in an explosion at a central Dhaka market later blamed on a bad gas line. A fire and subsequent explosions at a container depot in the port city of Chittagong last year killed more than 50 people.