A woman's idea helps save 15 lives in Delhi fire

IANS  |  New Delhi 

As a fire broke out in a four-storeyed building here in the early hours of Monday -- over 20 people inside, 55-year-old Verma, who was among the dozens of onlookers, suggested using an old as a bridge between two buildings. And, it worked!

"God gave me the idea to use the and we were able to save more than 15 people from the building," Verma told IANS.

When the fire broke out at around 6.00 a.m in the ground floor of a shoe-making factory, located in a densely populated residential area in Sultanpuri of west Delhi, Verma was still sleeping in her second-floor house behind the factory, separated by a narrow lane.

"My neighbour came and informed me about the fire in next building. When we came out, there was black, thick smoke everywhere," Verma recalled.

"From the building which was on fire, seven to nine faces were peeping through the windows. They were calling out for help," Munna, 40, a neighbour said.

"By that time, one of them mustered courage and jumped from the window and landed on our terrace," he said.

But the distance between the buildings, separated by a narrow lane, and the height difference between the two made the jump difficult and risky.

"We were thinking about using a saree to join the buildings among other options and that is when aunty (Verma) said that there was an old lying behind the house and we could use it to join the buildings," said.

In no time, Verma and others fetched the about eight-foot-long wooden and kept one end of it on the tin roof of the toilet on the terrace and the other on the window of the building on fire.

"I was holding one end of the while one of the workers (of shoe factory) was holding the other end at the window of the burning building," said. "There was a lot of smoke as the fire raged in the ground floor."

"As the workers started walking one by one on the from their building to ours, faces of people appeared at their first floor window. They cried 'Bhaiyya humko bhi bachao (save us, too)'," he said.

Verma, and others hurried the workers on the second floor and then took the to first floor of their building and saved around eight more people in a similar way.

and Verma said as soon as the workers reached safety, they ran away.

"They didn't even wait to say thanks and ran with their lives. We couldn't even count them," Verma said.

"She's from the village that's why she thought about the People from the city won't have such ideas," a woman who had gathered at the spot said with a smile.

As the woman said that Verma will live long for saving so many lives, the 55-year-old said with a smile: "I don't want anything apart from their blessings. I won't even identify them if I meet them again."

--IANS

nkh/nir

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, April 09 2018. 20:52 IST