A massive fire at a coaching centre in the Aliganj area of Lucknow killed 15 people on Monday [1].
The tragedy highlights the critical need for fire safety regulations in private educational facilities, which often house large numbers of students in densely populated urban areas.
Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath monitored the rescue operations and directed authorities to ensure immediate relief and medical assistance for the victims [2]. The blaze occurred in the Aliganj neighborhood, where emergency teams worked to evacuate students and extinguish the flames [2].
Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath said an ex-gratia payment of ₹5 lakh will be provided for the families of each person who died in the incident [1]. The state government is overseeing the distribution of these funds to the affected households.
Authorities said they have launched an investigation into the cause of the fire [2]. While the exact origin of the blaze remains unclear, officials are examining the building's safety protocols and the speed of the emergency response.
Rescue teams and medical personnel remained on site to provide support to those injured during the disaster [2]. The incident has prompted calls for stricter oversight of the coaching industry in Lucknow, where numerous small-scale institutes operate in residential and commercial complexes.
“A massive fire at a coaching centre in the Aliganj area of Lucknow killed 15 people”
This incident underscores a recurring safety crisis in India's competitive coaching hub culture, where rapid expansion of private tutoring centers often outpaces the implementation of fire codes and emergency exit requirements. The government's immediate focus on ex-gratia payments reflects a standard crisis-management response, but the subsequent investigation will likely determine if systemic negligence or lack of building certification contributed to the high death toll.


