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Serious 4 Houses In East Coast Road Burnt To The Ground! Bro Swee Keat and Grassroots Leaders Coming To The Rescue!

JohnTan

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SINGAPORE - Mr Christopher Pang was leaving home for supper with his friend on Monday night when he saw a bright orange glow at the second storey of a house two doors away.

He soon realised the house was on fire, and the flames were spreading fast.

He told his friend to wake his two teenage sons, mother-in-law and other residents, then ran to the burning house and called for the elderly brother-sister pair inside to stop packing their valuables and unlock their gate.

Together with another neighbour, they tried to douse the fire with garden hoses for about five minutes before the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) arrived.

“I was just focused on putting out the fire, first and foremost, to prevent injuries,” he said.

The blaze spread to three other homes, including Mr Pang’s house at 12S East Coast Road. It raged on for two hours before it was extinguished by SCDF firefighters.

Looking on as the flames crept towards his house, Mr Pang said he felt helpless.

His son Michael said he went to bed at about 11pm and was awakened by the acrid smell of smoke.

The 18-year-old woke his younger brother and maternal grandmother, who was visiting from Penang, and got them out of the house safely.

His paternal grandparents, mother and elder brother, who also live in the house, were not around at the time – his mother is overseas and his brother is serving national service. His paternal grandparents returned from work at their Western food coffee-shop stall at about 1am when the road was closed off.

Michael said he heard explosions and loud crashes as he evacuated his family and gathered valuables such as his laptop and mobile phone.

“I looked up and the ceiling was red,” he said, recounting that the flames had engulfed the top floor of the 2½-storey house.

Mr Pang, a real estate agent in his 40s, said he expects repairs to take about nine months because the structure of the house was badly damaged, as part of the second-storey ceiling had collapsed.

The family, who has lived in the house for 13 years, is staying at the nearby Village Hotel Katong for the time being.

“Everyone is traumatised. It’s something that no one should experience,” Michael said. “No one should ever lose their home. It’s like an animal losing its habitat.”

He said he lost most of his belongings including thrift-shop vintage clothing, several pairs of shoes and a gaming desktop PC, which amounted to thousands of dollars.

“I worked so hard to buy all that, and all the hard work was gone in minutes,” said Michael, who has worked part-time in the food and beverage industry since he was 16.

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Mr Pang said the master bedroom wardrobe had $1,500 in new notes that had just been withdrawn for Chinese New Year red packets, his marriage certificate and photo albums, which were all burnt to a crisp.

Other items that were lost include his wife’s watches and gold jewellery, diamond necklaces and a diamond ring passed down from her mother, a few thousand dollars in United States currency, a leather sofa and paintings. He estimates the loss to be about $200,000.

He also has about 100 bottles of spirits and wines which may go bad if they are not stored at the right temperature, since the house’s wiring was damaged in the fire.

Michael and his 13-year-old brother missed school on Tuesday, as they did not sleep that night. The second-year polytechnic student’s laptop and hard drive with all his school materials were damaged, while his younger brother’s laptop was lost in the fire.

“I have a lot of assignments coming soon, but my laptop and hard drive are not working. It’s very worrying,” Michael said.

When The Straits Times arrived at the scene at 9am, a fire engine and SCDF personnel were conducting investigations, and residents were seen moving their belongings out of their homes.

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The roofs of three houses were destroyed, leaving only piles of rubble where the top floors had been.

An elderly woman, who had difficulty walking and had bandages on her face and hand, and her brother were seen assisting SCDF with investigations. ST understands they live in one of the affected homes.

The pair declined to comment.

About 20 residents were evacuated from the row of terrace houses, and one person was taken to Singapore General Hospital with minor burn injuries.

SCDF said it was alerted to a fire at 12S East Coast Road at about 11.50pm on Monday.

It added that it used a combined platform ladder for aerial firefighting, as well as six water jets at the height of the operation. Two fire engines were deployed.

https://www.straitstimes.com/singap...uses-badly-damaged-by-fire-in-east-coast-road
 
Scdf regulars skiving again? No NSF to do the dangerous work. Simple fire not even high rise all so can not put out properly? :cautious:
 
It raged on for two hours before it was extinguished by SCDF firefighters.
2 hours ? The fire fighters took their time to assess the situation slowlee to avoid another firemen casualty?
 
i saw some video my fren send me today. the water hydrant on the street couldn't pump out enough pressure water because of low pressure in the water hydrant and as a result more houses were burnt down. scdf never regularly maintain the pressure in the water hydrants?
 
2 hours ? The fire fighters took their time to assess the situation slowlee to avoid another firemen casualty?

It's a huge fire. Better to be safe than sorry, especially after the death of that sinkie fireman recently.
 
they can have my renovated flat in exchange for their burn down house. 3 rm rental family. got less value than them even without a fire.
 
It's a huge fire. Better to be safe than sorry, especially after the death of that sinkie fireman recently.
Firemen should pass the fire hoses to the owners when havingbtheir discussion on how to control the fire.
Death and injury part and parcel of rescue and fire fighting duties.
 
Wah...aircon compressor unit really fire-proof sia...what brand?
 
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