Once again, Delhi is ablaze, and with it, the lives of 21 people, including foreign nationals, have been extinguished. The fire that ravaged a commercial building in the capital is not merely a tragedy; it is a verdict on India's systemic neglect of safety standards. We are told that investigations will follow, that heads will roll, that reforms are coming. But how many times have we heard this before? The narrative is always the same: a disaster, an outrage, a promise of change, and then, silence until the next inferno.
This is not an accident. It is a predictable consequence of a society that prioritises profit over human life. India's rapid urbanisation has been a race to the bottom, where builders cut corners, regulators look the other way, and citizens are left to perish in buildings that would never pass muster in a civilised country. Compare this to the Victorian era in Britain, where public safety reforms were driven by a series of horrific industrial accidents. The Factory Acts, the Public Health Acts, the building regulations: each was a response to mass death. But in India, we seem to have learned nothing. Instead, we have a culture of 'jugaad' that celebrates makeshift solutions and a bureaucracy that is either corrupt or incompetent.
Some will argue that this is a false equivalence. After all, India is a developing nation with resource constraints. To which I say: rot. Developing nations do not have to be death traps. The real issue is a deficit of political will and a surplus of indifference. Foreign nationals died in this fire, which may finally provoke some international outrage, but should it take the death of outsiders for us to act? The British Raj built railway stations and post offices that still stand today, often with better safety features than modern Indian constructions. There is a perverse irony in the fact that colonial infrastructure sometimes surpasses our own in quality.
We are witnessing the intellectual decadence of a nation that has lost its way. Once, India was a land of great engineering and meticulous planning, from the Harappan civilisation to the Taj Mahal. Now we are a land of shoddy workmanship and regulatory capture. Every fire, every building collapse, every stampede is a symptom of a deeper rot: the erosion of accountability and the triumph of short-term greed.
What is to be done? First, we must stop treating these events as isolated incidents. They are the product of a system that is broken. Second, we need a national safety commission with real teeth, not another advisory body. Third, and most importantly, we need a cultural shift. Safety must become a value, not an afterthought. Until we demand that our buildings are built to last and that our regulators do their jobs, more bodies will pile up.
This fire is a burning indictment of our nation's priorities. It is a question we must answer: will we continue to let our cities become pyres, or will we finally demand that the state protects its citizens? The answer, I fear, is as predictable as the next tragedy.









