AMRI hospital punished guard for calling firemen
An employee said they had initially managed to contain the fire but a single flame suddenly leapt out and licked a stock of chemicals.
On October 8, a minor fire had broken out on the ground floor of the same AMRI Hospital. Security guard Haradhan Chakraborty did the right thing by calling the fire station without waiting to alert his superior. The staff doused the fire before two fire tenders reached the spot but the firemen wanted to inspect the scene. That, hospital sources said, angered the management and Chakraborty was reprimanded and suspended for two weeks.
On Thursday night, four security guards were posted around the hospital annexe that caught fire. But all they did for the first 90 minutes was apparently try to control the blaze themselves. By then, the toxic smoke had climbed to four floors.
Slum bravehearts take a bow
“Each one of us tried to help as many people as we could. Anyone would have done that,” says Binod Das, one among the many slumdwellers near AMRI who were the first line of rescue for helpless patients. Chief minister Mamata Banerjee will felicitate the selfless youths, the silver lining in a grim turn of events.
Directors sent to police custody
Six directors of AMRI Hospital — S K Todi, Ravi Todi, D N Agarwal, Prasanth Goenka, Manish Goenka and R S Goenka — were on Saturday sent to police custody for 10 days by an Alipore court. None of their lawyers pleaded for bail since the bar association had called a boycott of the accused.
Smoke spread before firemen came
By the time firemen arrived at AMRI Hospital on Friday morning, the battle was over. Fire officials who reached first confirmed that when they arrived, the entire building was covered with thick smoke. “The basement was too hot for us to enter and reach the seat of fire. That usually happens when the fire has been burning for quite some time,” said a fire official.
Joint CP (crime) Damayanti Sen said the Lalbazar control room received the first information of the fire at 4.08am and in two minutes, informed the fire brigade. But by then, hospital guards who tried to douse the fire and wasted precious time, had allowed the fire to go out of control. Meanwhile, deadly carbon monoxide had wafted into all rooms in the hospital through the airconditioning ducts.
As per the protocol set by AMRI management, employees and security staff informed night administrator Sajid Hossain, who was to then alert all wings of the hospital. “We can’t inform police or fire brigade individually. Only the night administrator can take such a decision,” said Prasanta , a hospital employee.
According to hospital maintenance staff, the fire was first spotted close to the building’s basement pharmacy that is part of the hospital’s central store. It was the pharmacy staff who spotted the fire first and alerted the security staff. “After the pharmacy staff spotted the fire, they gave a “code brown” alert which means there is a fire. The code is used to prevent panic among other sections of the staff as well as patients and their relatives,” an employee explained.
The staff used all 10 portable extinguishers at hand but could not arrest the flames. An employee said they had initially managed to contain the fire but a single flame suddenly leapt out and licked a stock of chemicals. That lead to spreading of the fire.
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