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Home » News » National
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PIL in SC seeks uniform national fire safety standards for public premises

Indian Community Editorial TeamBy Indian Community Editorial TeamJune 26, 20263 Mins ReadNo Comments Add us to Google Preferred Sources
PIL in SC seeks uniform national fire safety standards for public premises
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New Delhi, June 26 (IANS) A public interest litigation (PIL) has been moved before the Supreme Court seeking directions for the formulation and enforcement of a National Minimum Fire and Life-Safety Framework for high-risk public occupancy premises across the country, citing recurring fire tragedies in schools, hospitals, coaching centres, hotels and commercial establishments.

The writ petition, filed by advocate Narendra Kumar Goswami in his personal capacity, has sought directions to the Union and state governments to establish uniform minimum fire and life-safety standards for public buildings, irrespective of the existing regulatory framework in different states.

The plea contended that the existing legal framework governing fire safety remains fragmented and uneven across states and union territories, resulting in inconsistent standards and enforcement gaps that continue to endanger public safety.

The PIL has sought directions for the formulation and implementation of a National Minimum Fire and Life-Safety Framework covering schools, hospitals, coaching centres, hotels, guest houses, entertainment venues, commercial buildings and other public occupancy establishments.

It has prayed for effective mechanisms to ensure compliance with fire safety norms, periodic inspections, emergency preparedness, evacuation planning and accountability for violations by authorities and occupiers.

Referring to a series of fire tragedies across the country, the plea said the petition was necessitated by recurring incidents exposing systemic deficiencies in fire prevention, enforcement and public safety despite the existence of various statutory provisions and judicial directions.

The petition has referred to several major incidents, including the Uphaar Cinema fire, the AMRI Hospital fire, the Surat Takshashila Arcade coaching centre blaze, the Anaj Mandi fire, the Rajkot TRP Game Zone fire, the recent Malviya Nagar guest house fire in Delhi and the Aliganj coaching centre fire in Lucknow, among others.

“The recurring pattern of catastrophic fires demonstrates systemic regulatory failures, fragmented legal standards and inadequate enforcement mechanisms, resulting in continuing threats to public safety,” the plea stated.

The PIL contended that the matter raises substantial questions of law concerning the enforcement of fundamental rights under Articles 14 and 21, and the constitutional obligation of authorities to ensure reasonable safety standards in public spaces.

It has also relied upon previous Supreme Court judgments, including Avinash Mehrotra v. Union of India relating to fire safety in schools and the apex court’s suo motu proceedings concerning hospital fires, besides referring to the National Building Code, Model Building Bye-Laws, NDMA guidelines and the Model Fire Service Bill, 2019.

The petitioner said that a representation dated June 24 had already been submitted to the Union and state authorities seeking formulation and enforcement of a National Minimum Fire and Life-Safety Framework, but no effective action had been taken.

–IANS

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Indian Community Editorial Team

The Indian Community Editorial Team curates, verifies, and publishes stories that matter to Indians worldwide. From culture and community to business and innovation, our mission is to spotlight voices, ideas, and events that bring our global community closer together. Have news or a story to share? Submit it to us at [email protected].

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