the sun malaysia ipaper logo 150x150
Monday, June 22, 2026
22.1 C
Malaysia
the sun malaysia ipaper logo 150x150

Gas pipeline fire: ‘Home safety first, too early for legal action’ – Residents association

KUALA LUMPUR: The safety of a liveable home is a higher priority than legal action for residents in the aftermath (two days) of the gas pipeline fire on April 1, said deputy chairman of the Putra Harmoni Residents Association, Francis Koh.

He said currently residents who were less affected by the gas pipeline fire in Putra Heights, Subang Jaya, on Tuesday, see the way forward as wiring inspection and safety level checks in their homes since 9.30 am today.

“We hand over the investigation to the authorities first and we are managing the phased re-entry of residents after safety inspections.

“Legal action is premature, welfare issues of residents is more important first,” he said at the Incident Control Post (PKTK) set up at Subang Jaya today.

Meanwhile, Peter Lau, who is secretary of the Putra Harmoni Residents Association, said they have requested enforcement agencies to include the residents’ association in every meeting held.

“We need information to convey to the residents, as they currently lack information, which is why they are restless and anxious. I hope the authorities cooperate with the residents’ association because we have all the residents’ data, including their pets. We are also ready to assist any residents who face problems,“ he said.

Earlier, Bernama reported that the owners of 115 homes that were less affected by the gas pipeline fire in Putra Heights, Subang Jaya were allowed to enter their homes in phases starting today.

Petaling District Officer Huzunul Khaidil Mohammed reportedly said the first phase involved 41 homeowners on Jalan 1/3A, who were allowed in starting at 9.30 am for the purpose of inspecting the wiring (to prevent short-circuits) before electricity supply is restored.

As of yesterday, 364 victims from 74 families were evacuated in the fire and accommodated at two temporary evacuation centres (PPS), namely the Putra Heights Mosque and the Subang Jaya City Council (MBSJ) Camelia multipurpose hall.

The gas pipeline fire erupted on Tuesday morning at 8.10 am and extinguished at 3.45 pm by over 300 personnel in fire-fighting and rescue operations. Most of the evacuated residents were treated as out-patient for burns and heat inhalation (with over 60 hospitalised) with more than 230 houses (78 houses and 10 shophouses) affected.

Over 200 cars and motorcycles were also damaged in the landscape which resembles a war zone with rows of blackened houses surrounding a 30-foot deep crater where a towering column of fire erupted.

STAY AHEAD OF THE CURVE

Join our community for instant updates and exclusive content.

Join Telegram Channel

Related


spot_img

Latest News

UnionPay showcases innovations with 15 ecosystem partners at 2026 China International Financial Exhibition

UnionPay joined 15 ecosystem partners at the 2026 China International Financial Exhibition to showcase advances in global payments, cross-border QR interoperability, artificial intelligence, digital finance, and consumer growth solutions, highlighting its expanding international network and open fintech innovation ecosystem.

Ex-justice minister gets 25 years for S. Korea martial law role

A court sentenced ex-justice minister Park Sung-jae to 25 years for his role in Yoon Suk Yeol's 2024 martial law declaration.

Focus Graphite announces SEDAR+ filing of the NI 43-101 technical report with the updated...

Focus Graphite has filed an updated NI 43-101 technical report for its Lac Tetepisca Project in Quebec, outlining one of the world's largest identified graphite deposits with 120.2 million tonnes of indicated resources and significant expansion potential to support future battery-material supply chains.

Most Viewed

spot_img
WC26

World Cup 2026

Updates, Fixtures, Results & Standings