Mumbai, Oct 17 (Mid-day): Eight young lives were lost to callousness in Saturday's Kurla restaurant blaze; an urgent college project submission proved a blessing for their friends, who were about to join them for lunch
"As soon as we heard about the fire at the restaurant, we realised our friends were there. That is where we went every day, during lunch break and after classes. In fact, we were about to head there ourselves but we heard about the fire," said a student from Don Bosco College, located 100 metres from City Kinara restaurant, the site of a fire yesterday. Suspected to be the result of a gas leak at the restaurant, the fire killed eight people. Seven of them were students at Don Bosco.
Ask any of the students, though, and they will say that the tragedy could have been worse. The ground-plus-one-storey restaurant was old, dingy and crowded, but its inexpensive menu appealed to most students struggling with shoestring budgets.
In fact, at least 20 other students had planned to go there for lunch that afternoon, but were delayed because of a project submission. Around 1.30 pm, the students heard about the blast.
"Our project submissions were on, and so attendance wasn't as strict as it usually is. Our whole group of friends, all from different divisions, had decided to meet at the restaurant. Some of our friends were already there. But just as we were about to head there, we heard about the blast and that victims had been taken to Rajawadi Hospital. We rushed there too," said another student.
The hospital authorities informed them that eight people had died in the incident. Slowly, the bodies were identified by ID cards or other documents on their person, or with the help of families. Of the seven students, five were third-year students of IT Engineering, while two were third-year BMM students.
Many students stayed beyond college hours, anxiously waiting for news of their classmates. The worried faces of students and teachers filled the corridors of the college, as the police briefed the administration. "I taught them for three years," said a teary-eyed teacher about the deceased.
Friends in mourning
Some of the students realised their friends were missing and began to look for them, already dreading that they had fallen victim to the fire. "We knew there was no where else they would have gone. We saw their bikes outside the restaurant.
Our friend Akash Thapar was finally identified as one of those who died in the blast," said an IT Engineering student, Vicky.
Canteen woes
It was the one day Akash's mother had not packed his tiffin, and the third-year student of IT Engineering decided to join his gang of friends at City Kinara. It is a fact that haunts his mother, Rekha.
"I pack his tiffin box every day, especially because recently, he had been complaining about how expensive the canteen food is. But today, I gave him R100 to eat outside. I can't believe we have lost him," she said.
Expensive food at the canteen had, in fact, pushed many other students to eat at the more economical City Kinara.
"A couple of weeks ago, the management of the college canteen changed. Since then, the food there had become too expensive for us, and we began to visit City Kinara more frequently," said Akash's classmate.
Eight young lives were lost to callousness in Saturday's Kurla restaurant blaze; an urgent college project submission proved a blessing for their friends, who were about to join them for lunch
"As soon as we heard about the fire at the restaurant, we realised our friends were there. That is where we went every day, during lunch break and after classes. In fact, we were about to head there ourselves but we heard about the fire," said a student from Don Bosco College, located 100 metres from City Kinara restaurant, the site of a fire yesterday. Suspected to be the result of a gas leak at the restaurant, the fire killed eight people. Seven of them were students at Don Bosco.
Ask any of the students, though, and they will say that the tragedy could have been worse. The ground-plus-one-storey restaurant was old, dingy and crowded, but its inexpensive menu appealed to most students struggling with shoestring budgets.
In fact, at least 20 other students had planned to go there for lunch that afternoon, but were delayed because of a project submission. Around 1.30 pm, the students heard about the blast.
"Our project submissions were on, and so attendance wasn't as strict as it usually is. Our whole group of friends, all from different divisions, had decided to meet at the restaurant. Some of our friends were already there. But just as we were about to head there, we heard about the blast and that victims had been taken to Rajawadi Hospital. We rushed there too," said another student.
The hospital authorities informed them that eight people had died in the incident. Slowly, the bodies were identified by ID cards or other documents on their person, or with the help of families. Of the seven students, five were third-year students of IT Engineering, while two were third-year BMM students.
Many students stayed beyond college hours, anxiously waiting for news of their classmates. The worried faces of students and teachers filled the corridors of the college, as the police briefed the administration. "I taught them for three years," said a teary-eyed teacher about the deceased.
Friends in mourning
Some of the students realised their friends were missing and began to look for them, already dreading that they had fallen victim to the fire. "We knew there was no where else they would have gone. We saw their bikes outside the restaurant.
Our friend Akash Thapar was finally identified as one of those who died in the blast," said an IT Engineering student, Vicky.
Canteen woes
It was the one day Akash's mother had not packed his tiffin, and the third-year student of IT Engineering decided to join his gang of friends at City Kinara. It is a fact that haunts his mother, Rekha.
"I pack his tiffin box every day, especially because recently, he had been complaining about how expensive the canteen food is. But today, I gave him R100 to eat outside. I can't believe we have lost him," she said.
Expensive food at the canteen had, in fact, pushed many other students to eat at the more economical City Kinara.
"A couple of weeks ago, the management of the college canteen changed. Since then, the food there had become too expensive for us, and we began to visit City Kinara more frequently," said Akash's classmate.