World Cup final venue fails fire inspection

MUMBAI, (Reuters) – Wankhede Stadium, venue for the  Cricket World Cup final on April 2, has not met fire safety  standards, the chief fire officer for Mumbai said today.
“We will soon write a letter to the MCA (Mumbai Cricket  Association) stating there is a need to comply with fire safety  norms at the stadium. Once they abide by the terms we would  again conduct an inspection,” chief fire officer Uday Tatkare  was quoted as saying by the Press Trust of India.
“The team has found that the newly renovated stadium has  many loopholes in its fire safety mechanism. The stadium must  be in compliance with the fire safety conditions,” Tatkare  said.
The stadium also failed an inspection by the International  Cricket Council (ICC) in December but earlier this week was  given the go-ahead for its three World Cup matches starting on  March 13.
“Among the mandatory fire apparatus are … water hydrants,  internal riser system for the stands, no-smoking indicators,  fire alarms and extinguishers have to be installed,” a Mumbai  fire officer told PTI on condition of anonymity.
“There are some lapses which they need to look into.”
The MCA, responsible for the stadium, was confident it  could comfortably meet the fire brigade’s demands.
“The fire brigade officials had come for a visit few days  back and they had suggested a few safety norms after their  visit,” Association secretary Lalchand Rajput told Reuters on  Friday.
“We are working on those and we will be ready. There is  absolutely no worry. There has been no formal letter from the  fire department yet.”
The ICC’s tournament director Ratnakar Shetty told Reuters:  “I am not aware of this. I am not in Mumbai.”
The World Cup starts in Dhaka tomorrow with a match  between co-hosts Bangladesh and India.
An ICC spokesman declined to comment.