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[VIDEOS] Karachi under fire: Updates, reactions, and thoughts

FearlessRoar

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Think someone did it deliberately to remove the records of documents


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Fire erupts at Pakistan Stock Exchange building in Karachi​


A fire broke out on the fourth floor of the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) building on Monday located on Karachi's I. I. Chundrigar Road, according to fire brigade officials.

The fire brigade promptly dispatched three fire hydrants to the scene upon receiving reports of the blaze. Authorities are working to contain the fire and prevent it from spreading to other parts of the building.

The people present inside the PSX building were evacuated to the parking lot.

According to officials, the blaze broke out on the fourth floor of the stock exchange building due to short-circuiting.

 
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Fire at Karachi’s PSX brought under control: rescue officials​


A fire that broke out at the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) building in Karachi on Monday and led to the suspension of trading activity for around two hours has been brought under control, rescue officials said.

According to Sindh Rescue 1122 spokesperson Hassaan Khan, no loss of life has been reported.

The fire initially broke out on the fourth floor of the Ali Habib Trading Company building on I.I. Chundrigar Road, Khan said. He added that the cooling process of the building had begun as fire brigades reached the spot.

Khan noted that as soon as Rescue 1122’s Central Command and Control received the information, two fire brigade trucks reached the spot to douse the blaze.

He added that one snorkel and a total of six fire brigades had reached the building to extinguish the fire.

Following the fire, trading had been halted at around 10:30am and resumed two hours later near 12:30pm.

Once the fire was brought under control, the KSE-100 index caught proverbial fire, gaining 484 points in intraday trade at around 2pm to reach 80,697 points.

In February, the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation informed the Sindh High Court that it had conducted a fire safety audit of over 265 commercial buildings, and not a single one was found to have a fire safety certificate or a no-objection certificate (NOC) issued by the fire brigade department.

The report, filed on behalf of Metropolitan Commissioner Afzal Zaidi, stated that serious shortcomings had been observed during the audit.

In November, a woman suffered burn injuries after a fire erupted in a multi-story building on I.I. Chundrigar Road.

He said the fire erupted on the third floor of the Business and Finance Centre, adding that the flames spread to the sixth floor. DIG Raza said there were 300 offices in the building with 2,000 employees, who were safely evacuated.

 
A second fire incident in Karachi in just one month

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Fire at Karachi's Shahrah-e-Faisal building sends two to hospital​


A fire broke out on the ninth floor of a building near Metropole Hotel on Shahrah-e-Faisal in Karachi, causing smoke to fill the structure and resulting in five people losing consciousness.

According to police officials, two of the affected individuals have been transported to Jinnah Hospital for treatment.

Due to the dense smoke, the rescue operation was initially halted but resumed shortly afterwards. All 50 individuals inside the building were successfully evacuated, including those on the roof, who were brought down using a snorkel.

Authorities reported that ten fire brigade vehicles and two snorkels are currently at the scene to extinguish the fire.

Additionally, the road from Jinnah Hospital to Metropole has been closed to traffic. Traffic police are redirecting vehicles from FTC to Kala Pul to manage the situation.

Fire brigade officials confirmed that there are no further reports of individuals trapped inside the building and expressed confidence that the fire would be brought under control soon.

The Pakistan Navy's firefighters are assisting in the efforts to contain the blaze. According to a spokesperson for the Pakistan Navy, five fire tenders, a snorkel, and personnel from the Navy are aiding in the firefighting operations.

 

Fire in Karachi's Clifton burns more than 30 cars​


In Clifton, Karachi, more than 30 vehicles were partially or fully destroyed by a fire early Monday morning.

The incident occurred in a plot near the Qurtuba Mosque in Clifton Block 1, Sheerin Jinnah Colony.

The fire erupted suddenly among the abandoned vehicles, quickly escalating to a large blaze.

Local police arrived at the scene and promptly requested assistance from the KMC Fire Brigade and Rescue 1122.

Three fire trucks were dispatched to the site, and firefighting efforts commenced.

After approximately one to one-and-a-half hours of intense efforts, the fire was brought under control.

Despite the extensive damage to the vehicles, no casualties were reported.

According to a Rescue 1122 spokesperson, the Central Command and Control received the first report of the fire at 6:30 AM, indicating that more than 20 of the abandoned vehicles were completely burned.

Fire Brigade officials had received the initial report around 5:30 AM and sent out two fire trucks from KMC.

The vehicles involved were reportedly government-owned, and the exact cause of the fire is yet to be determined.

 
Preliminary report issued on Karachi Gul Plaza fire; collapse and casualties revealed

Fire brigade officials have released an initial report on the devastating fire at Karachi’s Gul Plaza, confirming structural collapse and casualties.

According to the report, the rear part of the building has completely collapsed, claiming the life of firefighter Furqan. Another firefighter from the Karachi Municipal Corporation (KMC) Fire Brigade was injured after being struck by debris.

So far, authorities have reported 6 deaths and 17 injuries. Fire officials said the blaze has been controlled by approximately 60 per cent, but flames continue to flare up intermittently.

Firefighters are battling the fire from three sides, with ample water supply available. However, officials noted that the building’s structure remains extremely weak, and the front section could collapse at any time, making complete extinguishment a significant challenge.

The report underscores the dangers faced by emergency personnel and highlights the ongoing risks as efforts continue to bring the fire fully under control.

Earlier, Sindh government spokesperson Sadia Javed said that the fire brigade was facing severe difficulties in extinguishing the blaze due to the building’s poor infrastructure.

“There is no proper exit from the building, nor any system for air circulation,” she said, adding that firefighters were unable to enter the building at several points because of intense heat and smoke.

Fire tenders from across Karachi have been deployed to the scene, while Pakistan Navy and Karachi Port Trust (KPT) vehicles also joined the rescue operation. Sadia Javed revealed that no fire extinguishing arrangements were installed in Gul Plaza. She also disclosed that while the building was approved for 400 shops, around 1,200 shops had been constructed, a serious violation of building regulations.

 
Fourteen dead, dozens missing in massive Pakistan mall fire

A massive fire that tore through a shopping centre in Pakistan's largest city has killed 14 people, including a firefighter, and rescuers are racing to find dozens more still missing.

It took firefighters more than 24 hours to put out the blaze in Gul Plaza that started Saturday night. The building housed 1,200 stores and spanned 8,000 sq m (86,111 sq ft).

Parts of the building have collapsed, with officials saying the debris and lack of ventilation were hampering rescue efforts.

"Almost the entire building was already engulfed in flames", by the time rescuers arrived at the site on Saturday night, local emergency services said.

Fifty-eight people have been reported missing by their families, who have gathered outside what remains of the centre, waiting anxiously for news of their loved ones. Administrators for the city have set up a desk to register the names and details of the missing.

Smoke was still billowing from what remains of the Gul Plaza building on Sunday morning. Much of it has collapsed and there are concerns it could collapse further.

Hassan Khan, a spokesperson for Rescue 1122 in Karachi, told BBC Urdu the fire spread rapidly because of the presence of flammable materials such as plastic foam, cloth, and perfume in the building.

By Sunday evening, various parts of the Gul Plaza were charred and reduced to rubble. Rescuers told Reuters news agency that the whole building could come down.

Cranes have been deployed to shift what remains of the partially collapsed building, in the hope of recovering more bodies. However, rescuers are still waiting for the structure to sufficiently cool down so they can conduct a thorough search.

At least 26 of those reported missing were last seen inside the building, according to the locations of their phones, a police official told the BBC.

, a shopkeeper at Gul Plaza, told BBC Urdu that hundreds of people were inside the building when the fire broke out on Saturday.

"My shops were burning before my eyes. We couldn't even get the goods out of those shops.

"There are still many people inside, I have many friends who are out of contact," he said.

Another onlooker said shopkeepers had tried to use fire extinguishers, but the intense blaze was uncontainable.

Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari expressed his condolences and told the government of Sindh province, where Karachi is based, to conduct a comprehensive review of safety arrangements in commercial and residential buildings across the area.

BBC
 
Heart breaking situation of Karachi. Once a great city of Bharat.


Karachi was a predominantly Hindu city before partition and Sindhi hindus dominated trade, baking, administration and shipping in the city and made it into one of the prominent cities of Bharat.

Many of the city’s finest pre-Partition buildings, schools, and markets were built by Hindu merchants and philanthropists.

Temples, dharamshalas, and Hindu neighborhoods were integral to the city’s social fabric.

After partition; almost the entire Sanatani population of the city fled to India whereas Refugees from North India, Urdu-speaking Muhajirs, poured in.

Karachi was made Pakistan’s first capital, accelerating demographic replacement at breakneck speed.

In a single decade, a city with ancient Sindhi-Hindu roots was culturally overwritten. Few cities in the world have undergone such a total civilizational reset so quickly.

Heart breaking stuff at the total collapse of a city’s soul and civilization legacy.

@KingKhanWC @Usman @DeadlyVenom @Cpt. Rishwat @Suleiman @Major @Slim @Rana @gazza619 @IAJ @emranabbas @LordJames @ElRaja @Markhor
 
Many people have lost their lives in this tragedy. I'm not sure how some cows roaming around and some Ganesh statutes would have eased it tbh.
 
Survivor reveals 24 of 26 gates were shut, smoke and darkness caused chaos

Survivors of the deadly Gul Plaza fire have revealed shocking details of the chaos inside the building, exposing major safety failures that turned the shopping centre into a death trap, ARY News reported.

Speaking to the media from Civil Hospital, Zubair, who was brought in unconscious after the Gul Plaza fire, said the situation became unbearable within minutes of the blaze breaking out.

Zubair said Gul Plaza has a total of 26 gates, but after 10pm, 24 of them were locked, leaving only two exit routes open.

“When the fire started, darkness and thick smoke filled the building. The locked gates made the situation much worse,” he said, adding that more than 20 people, including relatives and guests, were present inside his shop at the time.

He said the fire broke out on the ground floor while he was on the mezzanine floor of Gul Plaza and the flames spread rapidly, filling the entire market with smoke. Zubair said he collapsed outside his shop due to smoke inhalation and lost consciousness.

A second shopkeeper, who is also Zubair’s cousin, described how he and others entered Gul Plaza on their own to save trapped people.

“We went inside Gul Plaza on our own and pulled our cousin Zubair out. There were 12 to 15 people in our shop, including women. Breathing was extremely difficult because of the smoke,” the shopkeeper said.

He said when he contacted another cousin trapped inside Gul Plaza, the man began apologizing and said he did not think they would survive.

“We managed to bring many people out of the building with our own hands. Some people were lying unconscious on the ground,” he added.

The shopkeeper said there was no emergency exit in Gul Plaza, and at night all gates were shut except two, which turned the building into a trap when the fire erupted.

He appealed for the recovery of the missing, saying, “We pray that at least the bodies are found so we can perform their burials.”

The survivors’ accounts have raised serious questions about safety arrangements at Gul Plaza and other buildings in Karachi, as rescue operations continue and families wait anxiously for news of their loved ones.


 

Gul Plaza tragedy triggers governance debate in National Assembly​


The fire in Karachi’s Gul Plaza dominated debate in the National Assembly on Tuesday, with MQM-P leader Farooq Sattar describing the blaze as a “national tragedy” and accusing the Sindh government and city authorities of negligence and a delayed response.

He said Karachi’s residents had the right to question both the provincial and federal governments over where the city stood in their list of priorities.

The fire that broke out late on Saturday night at Gul Plaza has killed at least 28 people, while dozens still remain unaccounted for.

Tempers flared in the House as MQM-P members tore up agenda papers and demanded that routine business be suspended to focus solely on the Karachi tragedy. Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar later moved a motion to defer the remaining agenda, which was approved by Deputy Speaker Ghulam Mustafa Shah.

Sattar said decades of neglect had left Karachi critically short of firefighting resources, arguing that the city was undercounted, underrepresented and underfunded. Paying tribute to firefighter Furqan Ali, who died while battling the blaze, he said accountability was unavoidable and that those responsible must seek forgiveness from the public. He renewed calls for stronger local governments, saying a city the size of Karachi could not be run by a chief minister alone.

PPP leader Shehla Raza rejected MQM-P’s criticism, saying it was not necessary for ministers to immediately visit incident sites and that the priority should be effective emergency management. She outlined the official response to the fire, acknowledging delays caused by traffic congestion, and insisted that Sindh had a functioning local government system.

Later, Defence Minister Khawaja Asif echoed calls for empowered local governments, saying it was “humanly impossible” to manage Karachi under the current administrative structure.

“I am not blaming individuals, I am blaming the system,” he said, arguing that the concentration of authority in provincial capitals had weakened governance.

He said the spirit of the 18th Amendment had yet to be realised, as power had not been meaningfully devolved to the grassroots level. True public empowerment, he said, required a strong and autonomous local government system.

“If there is no empowered local government, there will be no effective fire brigade, no timely emergency response and no accountability at the neighbourhood level,” he said.

Calling the Gul Plaza fire a wake-up call, Asif urged parliament to reflect seriously and pursue constitutional reforms to strengthen local governments.

MQM-P lawmaker Wasim Hussain, responding to remarks by PPP’s Abdul Qadir Patel, accused political rivals of past complicity in Karachi’s problems, including developments linked to Gul Plaza. Patel rejected the allegations, saying the Sindh government was committed to stabilising the city and supporting those affected by the fire.

The debate had opened with Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf lawmaker Shehryar Afridi congratulating Mahmood Khan Achakzai on becoming opposition leader, calling it an honour for Balochistan and the country. He questioned coordination between provincial and federal disaster authorities in the wake of the Karachi fire, while criticising the use of the term “internally displaced persons” for people affected by military operations in the merged districts, saying forced displacement undermined human dignity.

Afridi alleged that tribal areas had been used to draw funds without the delivery of basic services and called for broader jirga consultations to take all stakeholders into confidence.

The House also saw heated exchanges over security operations in Khyber and Waziristan, with PTI and JUI-F lawmakers protesting against displacement during harsh winter conditions. PTI’s Iqbal Afridi warned that a failure to provide relief could spark protests, while former speaker Asad Qaiser accused the federal government of withholding funds owed to Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa under the NFC Award.

Several bills, including a proposed constitutional amendment and institutional legislation, were referred to standing committees before the session was adjourned until 11am on Wednesday.

 
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