×
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Survivors charge AMRI with callousness

Last Updated 09 December 2011, 18:31 IST

“The sprinklers and the fire extinguishers were simply not working. We were all asleep when the fire broke out. Nobody bothered to wake us up. One of my roommates and I got up following the chaotic noise,” said Rajib Das, who underwent an operation on Thursday night.

“I couldn’t remember on which floor I was staying. All I could remember was thick black smoke engulfing the whole floor. There were not enough staff to take the patients to safety. Only two nurses were there and they were clueless about the emergency exit,” he said.

Das accused the hospital authorities of not undertaking proper fire fighting facilities. “They are charging lakhs of rupees from patients, so why were they so lethargic and ignorant towards the safety of the patients? Nobody is getting free treatment here,” he said.

Das, along with some of the patients, was saved by firemen early in the morning. “I am quite a heavy man and I had just undergone a stent operation so I could not come down on a rope unlike other patients. I came down a fire brigade ladder. I must say that I got a second life today,” he said.

A patient, saved along with Das, lashed out at hospital authorities and nursing staff for leaving them behind to get burnt to death. “Actually it is a closed place. So when the AC stopped working and the smoke began to spread, I had problems breathing, that’s when I was startled out of sleep and saw what was happening,” said the patient, who didn’t want to be named.

“It was Das who found out the emergency exit, but it was locked. I came down a rope but while coming down, both my palms got scratched due the roughness of the rope,” he said.

He also alleged that the hospital didn’t have a proper in-house fire fighting crew to tackle such fire situations. Both Das and his fellow patient have currently been shifted to the main building of the AMRI hospital.

D Paul, whose 12-year-daughter died, blamed the ignorance and arrogance of securitymen as the reason for his girl’s death. “I was pleading with the security guards to allow some of us inside so that we could get some patients out, including my daughter. But they were adamant in not letting us in. Neither the security guards nor we were allowed to go inside. They had even locked the gate of the staircase,” said Paul.

ADVERTISEMENT
(Published 09 December 2011, 18:31 IST)

Follow us on

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT