Nine persons, including five children, were killed and a fireman was injured when a fire broke out at a medical store in a chawl in suburban Andheri this morning, police said.
Among the five deceased children was a 3-month-old infant, they said.
The fire occurred early this morning at 'Wafa' medical store located on the ground floor of a chawl in Juhi Galli on Wireless Road in Andheri, Mumbai police spokesman Ashok Dudhe said.
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Eight persons were initially killed in the blaze. Later, a seriously injured woman also succumbed to her burns at a hospital, police said.
The families of the victims were staying on the first and second floors of the premises, he said.
According to police and fire brigade officials, the electric wiring and other power installations in the 120 sq ft medical store caught fire. The blaze then spread to other floors of the ground plus two-floor chawl in which nearly 17-18 people were staying.
Prima facie, the police and fire officials suspect that because of a very small internal staircase in the chawl, the victims were trapped inside the premises and got engulfed in the fire.
"The deceased were sleeping on the floors above the medical store in the ground plus two floors chawl and could not find a passage to come out," said P S Rahangdale, chief of the fire brigade staff of Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation.
He said that short-circuit was suspected to have triggered the fire, but an investigation was underway to ascertain the exact cause.
Following the mishap, the victims were rushed to the nearby Cooper Hospital.
The deceased have been identified as - Saburiya Mozin Khan (52), Siddik Khan (35), Rabil Khan (28), Sabiya Khan (28), Mozhel Khan (8), Unnihay Khan (5), Aliza Khan (4), Tubba Khan (8) and Altaz Khan (3 months), fire brigade said.
Sabiya had sustained 45% burns in the mishap and was shifted to Kasturba hospital where she succumbed.
Besides, a fireman, Avinash Shirgaokar, suffered injury in the mishap. He was treated at Cooper Hospital.
Police said the exact cause of the blaze would be ascertained after a proper inquiry.
"Our fire brigade team received a call at 6.15 a.m. and we rushed three fire tenders, one water tanker and two ambulances to the spot," a fire brigade official earlier said, adding that the blaze was brought under control in about an hour.