KARACHI, Pakistan — The catastrophic fire that engulfed a commercial complex in Pakistan’s port metropolis of Karachi has now claimed 67 lives, authorities confirmed Thursday. The grim discovery of additional human remains has substantially increased the death toll from the weekend tragedy that reduced Gul Plaza to ruins.
Rescue operations persist at the extensively damaged shopping center where the inferno initially broke out on Saturday. According to Police Surgeon Dr. Summaiya Syed, the recovery process has been severely complicated by the fragmentary condition of most remains, creating significant challenges for victim identification. Senior Karachi police official Asad Raza corroborated the updated casualty figures, which represent a near doubling of previously confirmed fatalities.
The Sindh provincial government reports approximately 70 individuals remain unaccounted for following the rapid escalation of flames, which were intensified by the combustion of retail merchandise including cosmetics, apparel, and plastic household goods. The fire erupted during evening hours when commercial establishments were either concluding operations or had already vacated the premises.
While the official investigation into the fire’s origins remains ongoing, preliminary assessments by law enforcement suggest electrical short-circuiting as the probable ignition source. This tragedy echoes Karachi’s historical vulnerability to major fire incidents, frequently attributed to inadequate safety protocols, lax regulatory oversight, and unauthorized construction practices.
The city has witnessed several comparable disasters in recent years, including a November 2023 shopping mall fire that resulted in 10 fatalities and 22 injuries. Pakistan’s most devastating industrial catastrophe occurred in 2012 when a garment factory conflagration claimed at least 260 lives, highlighting persistent systemic safety failures.
