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THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
Locked exits, panic and desperate calls for help: Survivors tell of mall fire horror
Riaz Sohail, Zubair Khan and Qaisar KamranBBC Urdu
AFP via Getty Images
Dozens of people are still missing after Gul Plaza caught fire on Saturday evening
Muhammed Amin is beside himself with grief and despair.
His brother, Naveed Memon, was inside Gul Plaza when a massive fire ripped through the densely-packed shopping centre in Pakistan's commercial capital, Karachi.
Like dozens of others, he still hasn't been found.
"What should I tell my mother when I go home? What should I tell my nieces?" asks Amin.
"My nieces are crying for their father - they are asking me why he is late to come home. What should I tell them? How can I tell them that their father is gone?"
Housing an estimated 1,200 shops across a basement, mezzanine and three floors, Gul Plaza was a wholesale market that offered a wide range of cheaply-priced products, including wedding wear, toys, decorations, bed sheets, artificial flowers and baby clothes. The city's residents would frequent it in droves, particularly ahead of festivals, weddings and other important occasions.
What started the fire is still unknown.
But witnesses say the speed at which it spread, a lack of working fire exits and the density of shoppers and stalls crammed into the building exacerbated the disaster.





