Fear Grips Hauz Rani Streets Two Days After Deadly Inferno
Fear Grips Hauz Rani Streets After Deadly Inferno

Two days after a devastating fire at a bed and breakfast establishment claimed 21 lives, the south Delhi neighbourhood of Hauz Rani remains trapped between grief and anger. As Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) teams moved through the area on Friday, sealing guest houses and taking action against alleged illegal constructions, residents watched from behind shuttered shops, asking a question that has come to define the aftermath of the tragedy.

Unusually Quiet Streets

Until this week, the locality’s maze-like lanes were packed with tourists, hotel staff, delivery workers and shoppers. On Friday, many of those lanes stood unusually quiet. Several guest houses remained locked, some sealed by the civic authorities. Laundries, grocery stores, travel agencies and eateries reported little or no business. Local traders said many tourists had shifted to Saket and other parts of south Delhi after the fire.

Outside one of the buildings facing civic action, a group of residents gathered around MCD officials as workers examined staircases and structures. A shopkeeper told The Tribune, “The MCD is covering up its mistakes by breaking stairs of our houses and shops and creating discomfort for customers and us. If these buildings were illegal, how were they operating all these years?”

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Fear and Uncertainty

At his chemist shop, Shail said the atmosphere had changed completely since the fire. “People are scared to stay in guest houses. Some are even scared to enter buildings they have been visiting for years. There is a sense that nobody knows which building is safe and which is not.”

A few shops away, fruit seller Rahim looked across a row of closed establishments. “I have been working here for years and I have never seen the market this silent. Business losses can be recovered. Lives cannot. Every closed shutter reminds us of what happened.”

Residents Question Accountability

Near a building under inspection, local resident Abdul watched the proceedings unfold. “People died, and now everyone has suddenly woken up. Residents are not just mourning the victims. They are asking whether this tragedy could have been prevented.”

As news cameras moved through the locality and officials continued inspections, residents pointed to buildings they claimed had operated for years despite apparent safety concerns. A senior MCD official said strict action was being taken against illegal constructions and establishments violating building and fire safety norms. But in Hauz Rani, the crackdown has brought little comfort.

Eerie Silence Replaces Bustle

As evening descended, the market remained eerily subdued. Sounds of bargaining and tourist chatter that once defined the area had been replaced by conversations about fire exits, safety violations and accountability. For residents, the tragedy is no longer just about a fire. It is about the uncomfortable realisation that the action now unfolding across Hauz Rani began only after lives had already been lost.

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