10,000 homeless after fire sweeps through Bangladesh slum

A fire that swept through Dhaka's Mirpur neighbourhood has left more than 10,000 people homeless.

Dwellers at the fire devastated slum in Mirpur area of Dhaka.3,000 families have been affected by the massive fire in Mirpur 7 at the Jhilpar slum. (Photo by Sultan Mahmud Mukut / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) .

3,000 families have been affected by the massive fire. Source: SIPA USA

At least 10,000 people are homeless after a massive fire swept through a crowded slum in the Bangladesh capital and destroyed thousands of shanties, officials said Sunday.

The fire broke out at in Dhaka's Mirpur neighbourhood late on Friday and razed around 2,000 mostly tin shacks, fire services official Ershad Hossain told AFP.

"I could not salvage a single thing. I don't know what will I do," 58-year-old Abdul Hamid, who ran a tea stall inside the slum, told AFP as he broke down in tears.
Dwellers at the fire devastated slum in Mirpur area of Dhaka.3,000 families have been affected by the massive fire in Mirpur 7 at the Jhilpar slum. (Photo by Sultan Mahmud Mukut / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) .
Dwellers at the fire devastated slum in Mirpur area of Dhaka. Source: SIPA USA
Authorities eventually got the blaze under control and no-one was killed, although several people had minor injuries, firefighters said.

Many residents - largely low-income garment factory workers - were not in the slum as they had left their homes to celebrate the Muslim Eid al-Adha holiday with their families.

"Otherwise, the damage would have been bigger," local police chief Golam Rabbani said.

Around 10,000 people have taken refuge in cramped camps at nearby schools closed for the weeklong holiday, according to Hossain.
Local people help firefighters to douse a fire in a slum in Mirpur, Dhaka, Bangladesh on Friday, August 16, 2019. More than 1,000 shanties of the slum were burnt in the fire. (Photo by Salahuddin Ahmed/Sipa USA).
Local people help firefighters to douse a fire in a slum in Mirpur, Dhaka. Source: SIPA USA
"We are providing them with food, water, mobile toilets, and electricity supply," municipal official Shafiul Azam told AFP, adding that authorities were trying to find permanent accommodation.

Some families have erected tarpaulins to shelter them from bouts of rain during the monsoon season, but the wet conditions have turned the fields muddy.

Experts say fires are frequent in Dhaka due to lax safety measures.
An elderly were seen bursting into tears as his valuables were gutted in the fire in Mirpir, Dhaka, Bangladesh on Friday, August 16, 2019. More than 1,000 shanties of the slum were burnt in the fire. (Photo by Salahuddin Ahmed/Sipa USA).
An elderly were seen bursting into tears as his valuables were gutted in the fire. Source: SIPA USA
At least 100 people have been killed so far this year in building fires across the densely populated metropolitan city.

In 2012, a fire swept through a nine-storey garment factory near Dhaka killing 111 workers. An investigation found it was caused by sabotage and that managers at the plant had prevented victims from escaping.

A 2010 fire in Nimtoli, one of the most densely populated districts of the capital, killed 123 people.


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Source: AFP, SBS


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