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Case Filed Against 3 in India Training Center Fire


Firefighters work to douse flames on a building in Surat, in the western Indian state of Gujarat, May 24, 2019. At least 19 teenage students were killed in a fire in a four-story building, police said.
Firefighters work to douse flames on a building in Surat, in the western Indian state of Gujarat, May 24, 2019. At least 19 teenage students were killed in a fire in a four-story building, police said.

Indian police said Saturday they had filed a culpable homicide case against three people as the death toll from a building fire in India’s Gujarat state rose to 20, with students attending coaching classes accounting for all those killed.

Satish Sharma, commissioner of police in the city of Surat, told reporters that one of the three men named in the police report ran the classes and has been arrested, though no charges have been brought yet.

Firefighters douse a fire that broke out in a four-story commercial building in Surat, in the western state of Gujarat, India, May 24, 2019.
Firefighters douse a fire that broke out in a four-story commercial building in Surat, in the western state of Gujarat, India, May 24, 2019.

The Gujarat government has ordered an inquiry into the incident, as well as a fire safety audit of schools, colleges, coaching centers and commercial buildings in Surat, where the fire occurred.

Some eyewitnesses and families of the victims have alleged fire officials were slow to arrive, according to Reuters partner ANI. Paresh Patel, whose daughter was inside the commercial complex when the fire broke out, said the fire brigade took 45 minutes to arrive.

“Even though my daughter got saved, she is still in trauma,” he told ANI.

Initial investigations showed the fire, which broke out in the stairway of the multistory Takshashila Arcade building, was caused by a short circuit, according to local media reports.

Police were not immediately available to comment Saturday.

A government official said at least 50 students were in the complex when the fire broke out. Injured victims were rushed to hospitals and the toll could rise.

Television footage showed students desperately trying to escape by jumping off the building as smoke billowed from the top floor.

“To avoid such tragic incidents, I have asked officials to conduct fire safety audit of all buildings,” Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani said Friday.

There was no safety equipment installed in the building and no escape routes for the students, a fire official separately said.

Police said the building owner was among the three people named in the report but did not provide further details on their identities.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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