Bawana fire: Delhi Police file chargesheet against factory owner, 6 others

Written By dna Correspondent | Updated: Mar 22, 2018, 06:30 AM IST

A fire had broken out in the storage unit on the ground floor of the two-storey building in the Bawana area on January 20 engulfing the entire structure.

The Delhi Police filed a chargesheet in a city court against the owner of a firecracker factory in northwest Delhi on Thursday, where 17 people were killed in a massive blaze earlier this year.

Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Gagandeep Singh, before whom the police filed the document, took cognisance of the chargesheet and summoned factory owner Manoj Jain, co-owner Lalit Goyal and five others as accused before it on April 4.

A fire had broken out in the storage unit on the ground floor of the two-storey building in the Bawana area on January 20 engulfing the entire structure. Of the 17 killed, 10 were women. A man and woman were also injured in the incident.

Besides Manoj and Lalit, five other persons named as accused in the 800-page chargesheet are Surjeet Goyal, Girish Rathore, Sangeeta Vijay Yadav, Uma Mittal and Brij Bhushan Sood.

Surjeet and Girish were business partners of Manoj and Lalit in another factory in Bawana, while Uma had rented out the factory premise to Manoj, the police said. They also said that Sangeeta had provided chemical products including acid to Manoj.

While Manoj and Lalit are in judicial custody since January 31, Surjeet and Girish were earlier granted bail after being arrested, while Sangeeta, Uma and Brij were never arrested.

There is sufficient material against the accused under various offences to be summoned by the court, the chargesheet said. The police, while referring to the statement of some witnesses, including the labourers who worked in the factory, alleged that Manoj and Lalit manufactured Holi Gulal firecrackers with explosive materials "without following safety norms".

All the seven persons have been accused of the offences under Sections 285 (negligent conduct with respect to fire or combustible matter), 338 (causing grievous hurt by act endangering life or personal safety of others), 304 (culpable homicide not amounting to murder), 188 (disobedience to order duly promulgated by public servant) and 120B (criminal conspiracy) of the IPC and relevant provisions of the Explosives Act, Poison Act and Juvenile Justice Act.

POST-MORTEM REPORT

The police said that according to the post-mortem report, all the 17 victims died because of a combined effect of asphyxia and shock consequent to burn injuries.