Batla House fire turned a family’s dinner into a desperate escape, leaving their home in ashes and exposing civic neglect.

The crackling flames and cries for help shattered the quiet evening in Batla House’s P Block on Monday, when a fire, reportedly triggered by a short circuit, engulfed the flat of local resident Sharif, reducing it to ashes.

What began as an ordinary family dinner quickly turned into a desperate race for survival as residents rushed out, shouting for help. Many grabbed buckets of water and joined the effort to douse the Batla House fire, trying their best to stop the fire from spreading to nearby flats in the tightly packed lane lined with closely built houses.

“I found out about the fire when a short circuit happened outside in the balcony. The fire started from the balcony. As it spread, it reached the gate and then moved inside. When it reached the sitting area, we were in the lobby having dinner. Suddenly we saw flames and tried to extinguish them, but they spread rapidly,” recalled Sharif, his face still pale from shock as he stood before the charred skeleton of his home.

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“We tried to put it out (Batla House fire), but the fire spread so fast. I didn’t think of anything else just picked up my daughter, wife and son and ran downstairs for safety. Two of my children were at school,” he said.

The fire that took everything

According to eyewitnesses, the Batla House fire started from a short circuit in a washing machine placed in the balcony. The flames spread rapidly, fueled by electrical wiring and household materials, reaching the living area within seconds.

“Outside, there was chaos as fire was everywhere. There were already a lot of people outside because the flames were visible from the road,” said Sharif. Everyone tried to play their part in extinguishing the fire, with some calling the fire brigade. As word spread like wildfire, local leaders and YouTubers rushed to the spot, some even streaming live on social media.

Local leader Mahmood Ahmed was among the first to respond. In a video message from the site, he said: “A fire has broken out in a building in Batla House, and the fire brigade is probably stuck in traffic or on a road narrowed by encroachments. Please make way for them and remove your cars and other items.”

By the time Sharif and his wife managed to rush their children out, thick smoke had already filled the corridors. “There was no time to save anything,” he said, looking at what used to be his living room. “We didn’t even think of taking clothes or money. We only thought of the children. Nothing is left, not a single thing,” he added, standing outside his gutted flat.

A delay that cost dearly

Neighbours and passers-by gathered outside the building, trying to douse the flames with buckets of water, but despite their efforts, the blaze only grew stronger. Residents claim the fire brigade took more than an hour to arrive, struggling to navigate the narrow, congested lanes of Batla House.

“If the fire truck had reached within ten minutes, this could have been saved,” said a local resident who helped in the rescue. “But both sides of the road were blocked with parked cars. This is how every lane here is: There’s no way for emergency vehicles to pass.”

The delay, caused largely by poor urban planning and illegal roadside parking, turned what could have been a minor incident into a major disaster, said Mahmood.

Old problem ignored

The tragedy once again exposed the urban neglect and civic apathy that plague Batla House and similar localities in South Delhi. The area’s narrow lanes, tangled electric wires, and absence of proper parking or fire safety measures make it a tinderbox waiting to explode.

“People keep their cars on the road because there is no parking space. But that means fire trucks and ambulances can’t reach on time,” said another resident. “We’ve been warning about this for years.”

Gratitude amid ruin

The firefighters finally managed to control the flames. But nothing inside Sharif’s home survived: Not the furniture, not the children’s books, not even the walls that once made the small flat feel secure.

Standing amid the soot and smoke, Sharif’s voice softened as he said: “Everything is gone. But Allah saved our lives and for that, I’m grateful.”

As neighbours comforted the family, one thing became painfully clear: The fire in P Block was not just a personal tragedy. “It was a grim reminder of how neglect, congestion, and civic indifference continue to endanger lives in Okhla’s most crowded neighbourhoods,” said Saghir Abbasi, a local resident and activist.

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