Fire hits Bangkok's Sampeng market, 2 killed

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Fire hits Bangkok's Sampeng market, 2 killed

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Fire hits Bangkok's Sampeng market, 2 killed

https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/ge ... t-2-killed

A fire broke out near Sampeng market on Ratchawong road leading to the Ratchawong boat pier in Bangkok's Samphanthawong district. Two persons were reportedly killed, according to media reports.

Initial reports said a power transformer at a three-storey commercial building exploded at about 11.25am.

The explosion triggered the fire that quickly spread to engulf the commercial building with six shop fronts, sending plumes of smoke into the sky.

Fire engines and crews from the Suan Mali rescue station were deployed to combat the fire.

An unidentified person, whose sex and age were not yet known, was found dead during the firefighting operations. Another body was later found in a damaged shophouse.

Traffic Police radio station tweeted that six people, most likely firefighting volunteers, suffered smoke inhalation and were admitted to Klang and Hua Chiew hospitals for treatment.

The fire was brought under control at about noon but was still under watch.

An investigation was underway. Damage was being assessed.
A fire consumes shophouses in the Sampheng community near Yaowarat, Bangkok's Chinatown, on Sunday. (Photo: @EasternFire2016 via @fm91trafficpro Twitter accounts)
A fire consumes shophouses in the Sampheng community near Yaowarat, Bangkok's Chinatown, on Sunday. (Photo: @EasternFire2016 via @fm91trafficpro Twitter accounts)
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Re: Fire hits Bangkok's Sampeng market, 2 killed

Post by migrant »

Was just watching on the news, quite a fire!!
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Re: Fire hits Bangkok's Sampeng market, 2 killed

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Cause of B30m Sampheng fire still unclear

https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/ge ... ll-unclear

The cause of a fire that caused at least 30 million baht damage in Bangkok's Sampheng area on Sunday was still not clear on Monday.

The fire killed two people, one of them a foreign worker, and injured 11. It raced through seven shophouses and three vehicles, according to Samphanthawong district.

Witnesses said on Sunday they saw smoke coming from a power transformer at the mouth of Soi Kikuya, and then a fire moved quickly through the adjacent shophouses, some of which sold cardboard boxes and paper.

However, Thanes Weerasiri, president of the Engineering Institute of Thailand (EIT), said after a preliminary inspection of the damaged zone that there was no substantive evidence pointing to the low-voltage transformer having started the blaze.

Mr Thanes did not rule out the possibility that electrical and communication cables near the transformer could have sparked the fire.

Metropolitan Electricity Authority (MEA) governor Wilas Chaloeysat said the MEA was working closely with forensic experts to determine the cause.

Engineers, the MEA, police and City Hall and Samphanthawong district officials made an initial damage assessment that put the cost of the damage in Sampheng at 30 million baht.

The MEA said on Sunday it would take responsibility if the blaze was caused by a transformer.

The EIT president said the structure of two shophouses was seriously damaged by the fire and they were in danger of collapsing.

The Sampheng fire was the second major blaze in Bangkok in less than a week. A fire in the Bon Kai community destroyed 30 houses, but there were no injuries or deaths.

Sampheng is a popular market for bargain-hunters seeking toys, stationary, women's accessories and similar goods.

Bangkok Governor Chadchart Sittipunt said on Sunday the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration would work with the MEA to improve the safety of transformers and all cables. City Hall planned to remove the tangle of unused cables from power poles on Bangkok roads. They were a fire hazard, he said.

The burned electrical transformer and fire gutted shops after Sunday's blaze in Sampheng area, popular with bargain-hunting shoppers, in Bangkok's Samphanthawong district. (Photo: Engineering Institute of Thailand Facebook account)
The burned electrical transformer and fire gutted shops after Sunday's blaze in Sampheng area, popular with bargain-hunting shoppers, in Bangkok's Samphanthawong district. (Photo: Engineering Institute of Thailand Facebook account)
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Re: Fire hits Bangkok's Sampeng market, 2 killed

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It could not possibly be the jungle of cables!
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Power safety eyed after fire

https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/ge ... after-fire

Bangkok governor Chadchart Sittipunt will ask the Metropolitan Electricity Authority (MEA) to inspect the safety of some 400 power transformers and power lines across Bangkok after a fire in the busy Sampeng market killed two people on Sunday.

Mr Chadchart said the BMA will coordinate with the MEA over the checks while the MEA will also work with the Metropolitan Waterworks Authority and police to investigate the source of the fire.

The BMA will speed up laying electricity cables underground to prevent more incidents, he said.

The safety of buildings, fire exits, fuel containers, and fire extinguishers in public areas will likewise be checked to curb fire hazard risks.

People have also been urged to look out for any faulty transformers and cables.

One of the two people killed was a foreign worker. A further 11 people were injured by the fire.

The blaze raced through seven shophouses and three vehicles, according to Samphanthawong district office.

Witnesses said they saw smoke coming from a power transformer at the mouth of Soi Kikuya, and then a fire moved quickly through the adjacent shophouses, some of which sold cardboard boxes and paper.

Thanes Weerasiri, president of the Engineering Institute of Thailand (EIT), said, after a preliminary inspection of the damaged site, there was no substantive evidence pointing to the transformer having started the blaze.

Mr Thanes, however, did not rule out the possibility that electrical and communication cables near the transformer could have sparked the fire.

MEA governor Wilas Chaloeysat said the authority was working closely with forensic experts to determine the cause of the fire.

Engineers, the MEA, police and City Hall and Samphanthawong district officials made an initial damage assessment that put the cost of the damage in Sampheng at 30 million baht.

The MEA said on Sunday it would take responsibility if the blaze was caused by the transformer which had been in use for 20 years and was subject to a safety inspection last year.

Normally, a transformer has a life of 25 years.

Mr Thanes said two shophouses was seriously damaged by the fire and they were in danger of collapsing.

Sopa Kiatniracha, an inspector at the Labour Ministry, said the ministry was looking at what labour welfare would be offered to those fire victims registered with the social security system.

The Sampheng fire was the second major blaze in Bangkok in less than a week.

A fire in the Bon Kai community destroyed 30 houses, but there were no injuries or deaths.

Officials are clearing up the area after a fire engulfed commercial buildings on Ratchawong Road near Sampeng market in Samphanthawong district, Bangkok, on Sunday. (Photo: Apichart Jinakul)
Officials are clearing up the area after a fire engulfed commercial buildings on Ratchawong Road near Sampeng market in Samphanthawong district, Bangkok, on Sunday. (Photo: Apichart Jinakul)
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Re: Fire hits Bangkok's Sampeng market, 2 killed

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There is a lot of truth in the following, and it is just plain luck that more people weren't killed. Those types of transformers contain oil for cooling, plus who would know if the power had been isolated.
I guess it is just another example of mai pen rai!
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Fire response needs fixing

https://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/opi ... eds-fixing

Two major fires that hit bustling areas of Bangkok have shed light on serious flaws in the city's disaster management.

A deadly fire that hit Sampheng on late Sunday morning followed a blaze at Bon Kai that occurred less than a week earlier.

The Sampheng fire claimed two lives, both were workers at a three-storey shophouse selling plastic bags and paper boxes, which are flammable materials.

Initially, it was believed that an ageing power transformer, located near a burnt shop, was the source of the fire. According to the Metropolitan Electricity Authority (MEA), the transformer in question had been used for 20 years, and it was due to be decommissioned in five years.

A senior MEA official reportedly suspected an internal fault in the transformer as some passers-by told the authorities they saw smoke billowing from it early in the morning. But no action was taken before the transformer eventually exploded, creating the flames that engulfed the shop.

The shop's owner has claimed that the transformer had problems before and he is now suing the MEA for 10 million baht in damages.

As the authorities are investigating the fire's cause, damages and losses from both incidents suggest a poor crisis response by the relevant agencies, including firefighters and volunteers from private rescue teams.

Unlike Bon Kai where crowdedness and narrow sois made it difficult for firemen to access the area, the Sampheng shophouses are on the main road, so accessibility was not a problem.

But little has been said about why it took so long for MEA officials to reach the location and deal with what occurred.

Bangkok governor Chadchart Sittipunt is right in pinpointing the absence of on-site commanders in the Sampheng case who might have streamlined the fight-fighting operation. Without commanders, the task was in the hands of firefighters and rescue workers who perhaps lacked training in handling such a situation.

If accounts from Sampheng eye-witnesses are true, the MEA owes the public an explanation over why it failed to act sooner so the fire could have been better controlled.

Moreover, those fighting the fire tried using water to douse the flames from the burning transformer which would have only helped make matters worse given the nature of the fire.

A burning transformer needs to be extinguished through the use of chemical agents. The use of water shows those handling the Sampheng fire lacked the essential knowledge to do so. It's highly possible that the water tainted with oil from the transformer might have accelerated the fire.


Regardless of what the cause was, the BMA has to revamp its disaster management system, fire prevention plans and fire drills, and ensure that necessary instruments are ready.

Mr Chadchart has already asked the MEA to check the condition of the city's power transformers so as to avoid a repeat of the Sampheng blaze.

But the governor must not stop there. He should look further and put in place certain requirements such as storage limits for inflammable materials at shops or factories, in addition to necessary prevention measures like the installation of fire extinguishers and fire exits.

It's imperative that the governor and related agencies, including the MEA, confront the problem, learn from such hard lessons, and do whatever can be done to avoid yet another repetition.
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For on-line: File photo dated June 24, 2022 shows firefighters try to control a fire at a building storing toys on Soi Mangkorn in Yaowarat at around 11.30am ( Photo by Pornprom Satrabhaya/Bangkok Post).
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