Coaching centre tragedy: Magistrate’s probe report slams MCD, fire dept for misconduct
New Delhi, August 8
A magisterial probe into the deaths of three Civil Services aspirants in the flooding of a coaching centre basement has indicated mala fide violations of several laws by the Municipal Corporation of Delhi and the fire department.
The report submitted to the Revenue Minister on Wednesday said, “... owners and management of RAU’s IAS Study Circle were also responsible for the criminal negligence by indulging in dangerous misuse of basement without regard to the lives of the students.”
The report revealed that the “violation of rules” in the building were noticed before by the MCD and the fire department, but they took no action.
The probe conducted by the District Magistrate (central) revealed that the building where the coaching centre was being operated from had permission for “office/business” use, for which a fire NOC (no-objection certificate) was not needed.
However, it did require the fire department’s NOC as it was being used for “educational purpose” and was more than 9-m high, the report said.
On August 4, 2023, after a fire incident at a coaching institute in Mukherjee Nagar, the MCD had issued a notice citing “misuse” of property.
“The failure to seal the basement after the issue of misuse notice and not even mentioning the same in the show-cause notice and misleading the Deputy Commissioner of the factual field position of misuse appears to be deliberate misconduct with mala fide intentions on the part of the engineers concerned of the building department of MCD,” the report said.
The fire department also failed to refer to the “misuse” of the building’s basement as a library to the MCD during an inspection on July 1 this year, it said.
“The fire department should not have granted a fire safety certificate dated July 9, 2024, concealing the misuse of the basement as a library in violation of the building bylaws provisions of MPD-2021. This is a serious lapse on the part of the fire services inspection team,” the report noted.
It blamed the MCD officials of encroachment on stormwater drains and lack of desilting. It said the drains in the area had not been desilted for five years despite being prone to waterlogging due to their low-lying location. — PTI