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              Kolkata: 
              Rescuers brought out seemingly dead patients as anxious relatives 
              stared, hoping their worst fears would not come true, as thick 
              black smoke billowed from the Annex 1 new building of Kolkata's 
              AMRI hospital that had caught fire in the early hours of Friday.
 A steady stream of patients, blackened by soot and lifted with the 
              help of cloth and rope, continued to be brought out while enraged 
              relatives and locals vented their ire at the state and hospital 
              administration for sheer inefficiency.
 
 "What's the use of coming now? He is already dead. All are dead. 
              The administration is hopeless, useless," shouted Pradeep Sarkar 
              at the firemen. His father-in-law had been admitted there Thursday 
              night with a heart ailment.
 
 Sarkar, who was at the hospital through the night, accused the 
              fire engines of coming late and being ill-equipped. He said the 
              sky lift came only around 7 a.m. whereas the fire started around 3 
              a.m.
 
 "They (firemen) came with manual ladders. Had the sky lift come 
              earlier, many people could have been saved. There are around 160 
              patients inside. All are dead…so is my father-in-law," said Sarkar.
 
 Some patients could be seen lying motionless, making many suspect 
              that they had been asphyxiated on the hospital beds.
 
 Relatives of patients lurched from official to official to know 
              the whereabouts of patients, only to be met with a deafening 
              silence.
 
 "I have been looking for my aunt since 3 a.m. Neither the hospital 
              authorities nor police have any clue about where the patients are. 
              I do not even know if my aunt is alive," said Jayanta Bose, whose 
              aunt Meera Bose was being treated in the hospital.
 
 There was complete mayhem as hundreds of local people tried to 
              enter the hospital building to rescue patients, but were denied 
              entry by the hospital staff.
 
 "We saw smoke coming out of the building around 2 in the morning 
              and immediately many of us gathered and came here to extend help. 
              But we were denied entry. Had we been allowed inside, so many 
              people would not have died. They have mostly died of suffocation 
              because the fire did not reach the higher part of the building," 
              said Ronojit Mondal, a local who along with many other locals have 
              been aiding the rescue work.
 
 "When we reached here we could see some patients wailing for help 
              atop the windows but we were not allowed to go inside by the 
              hospital men. We pleaded, threatened and pushed but could not 
              manage to get inside. They must be punished with death for killing 
              these people," said Irfan, another infuriated local.
 
 When West Bengal Municipal Affairs Minister Firhad Hakim claimed 
              the death toll was 20, locals said it would be much higher as many 
              patients were still trapped inside. Sadly, they were proved right, 
              when Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee announced that 40 bodies had 
              been taken to the state-run SSKM Hospital from AMRI.
 
 As Banerjee reached the spot, the patience of relatives gave way 
              and they rushed towards her with their grievances. Police tried to 
              pacify the crowd while Banerjee herself pleaded on the microphone 
              for people to calm down.
 
 Rescue operations continued and so did the flow of rescued 
              patients though a look at them suggested, most of them were 
              lifeless bodies.
 
                
                
                
                
                
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