Death toll in Karachi mall fire climbs to around 50, official says

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Rescue workers searching for bodies on Jan 21, after a massive fire at Gul Plaza shopping complex in Karachi on Jan 17.

Rescue workers searching for bodies on Jan 21, after a massive fire at Gul Plaza shopping complex in Karachi, Pakistan, broke out on Jan 17.

PHOTO: AFP

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  • Karachi shopping mall fire's death toll rose to around 50, with 20-25 more bodies recovered from the debris on Jan 21, according to Deputy Commissioner Javed Nabi Khoso.
  • Gul Plaza was reduced to ash after firefighters battled the blaze; 84 people are missing, feared dead. DNA matching is required for the unidentified remains.
  • Shopkeeper Rehmat Khan described a "doomsday scenario". The fire, Karachi's deadliest since 2012, started on Jan 17, affecting 1,200 family-owned stores.

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KARACHI, Pakistan – Pakistani firefighters on Jan 21 retrieved the bodies of up to 25 people from the debris of

a shopping mall fire

in Karachi, taking the death toll to around 50.

The port city’s largest fire in more than a decade broke out late on Jan 17 and quickly spread through the sprawling Gul Plaza shopping complex, famous for its 1,200 family-owned stores selling wedding clothes, toys, crockery and other goods.

“We have found 20 to 25 dead bodies, or you call them remains,” Deputy Commissioner Javed Nabi Khoso told reporters.

He said the remains had been taken to a hospital for DNA matching.

Due to the difficulties in identification, he said it was hard to give a precise update on the death toll, which stood at 29 on Jan 20.

A small crowd paying tribute to the victims lit candles near the site, with some holding images of those presumed killed.

Firefighters had been battling the inferno inside the mall until Jan 20. By the time it was brought under control, Gul Plaza was reduced to a pile of ash and debris.

A total of 84 people had been registered missing, according to a state-run rescue service.

The police have said most of the missing are feared dead, meaning the toll could rise still further.

“It is a doomsday scenario,” said shopkeeper Rehmat Khan after seeing what was left of Gul Plaza inside. He said around 18 to 20 people had been in the shop, including six staff, when the fire erupted in the mall. All of them were missing, he said.

The blaze was Karachi’s most deadly since an industrial site went up in flames in 2012, killing more than 260 people. REUTERS

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