7 die in Rawalpindi house fire

Published June 17, 2015
The fire began at around 7:30am on Wednesday morning. ─ DawnNews screengrab
The fire began at around 7:30am on Wednesday morning. ─ DawnNews screengrab

RAWALPINDI: Seven people including five children were killed in a fire at a two-storey house on Wednesday morning in Rawalpindi's Chaklala Scheme 3 area. Two women were also injured in the fire.

Shaukat Cheema, 35, his wife Ayesha, 32, and their five children were killed as a blaze fanned out of control after electrical short-circuiting in the two-storey house, DawnNews reports. The eldest of the children, Hasan, was 14, while the youngest was four-year-old Fatima.

Two women who were injured during the fire have been taken to a nearby hospital for treatment.

Rescue teams put out the fire. ─ DawnNews screengrab
Rescue teams put out the fire. ─ DawnNews screengrab

The fire was extinguished by a fire brigade team, and police are now investigating the incident.

Eyewitnesses in the neighbourhood told DawnNews that the fire began at around 7:30am this morning. After seeing smoke and fire in the upper portion of the house, neighbours called Rescue 1122 services.

The inside of the house was destroyed. ─ DawnNews screengrab
The inside of the house was destroyed. ─ DawnNews screengrab

The upper portion of the house belonged to Shaukat, a businessman, while his brother-in-law, Anjum Shehzad, lived downstairs.

Those living downstairs were evacuated from the building at once.

Rescuers broke the upstairs windows to rescue those trapped upstairs, but the members of the family had passed away mostly due to asphyxiation.

The house contained wood work which caused it to spread quickly. TV footage showed charred furniture and burned out rooms. The upstairs portion has been mostly destroyed.

The seven who died lived upstairs, while the two women who were injured lived in the bottom portion of the house.

Family members have arrived at the scene, while neighbours are attempting to calm them.

Fires at commercial buildings and homes kill or wound dozens of people every year in Pakistan, where smoke detectors are rare.

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