Jaina Tower II Fails the necessary fire safety check’s in an inspection by Delhi Fire Service

Fire-Safety Reality Check at Jaina Tower-II
When an official rejection letter collides with a “pay-up-and-relax” WhatsApp forward, residents deserve the full picture.


1. What the Delhi Fire Service actually said

On 9 July 2025 the Directorate of Delhi Fire Service (DFS) returned the renewal application for Jaina Tower-II “REJECTED” after an inspection on 28 June. Five major lapses were recorded:

#Lapse observedWhy it matters
1All first-aid hose-reels installed but non-functionalNo immediate water supply for a fire on your floor
2Hydrant network present but inoperativeFire-fighters cannot pressurise the riser to attack flames
3Underground fire pumps not workingEntire wet-riser system is useless without them
4Overhead tank “damaged” and needs repairInsufficient water reserve for sprinklers/hose reels
5Exposed electric wiring running through passagesHighest cause of building fires in Delhi (The Times of India)

Outcome: Renewal refused until every defect is fixed and verified by DFS engineers, as mandated under Rule 37 of the Delhi Fire Service Rules, 2010 (India Code).


2. What the RWA WhatsApp message claims

A broadcast dated 30 July 2025 asks each office to pay ? 1,000 “this week” so that the Fire-NOC can be renewed before 30 September 2025.
No mention is made of the DFS rejection or the costly repair work it demands (pumps, tanks, wiring, testing, third-party certifications, etc.).


3. Why the two stories don’t add up

DFS letterRWA message
Renewal rejected until lapses are curedRenewal “due” in September; just collect renewal fee
Specifies technical faults & safety risksMentions no faults, no repair plan
Requires rectification first, then re-inspectionImplies fee payment alone will secure NOC

Until every shortcoming is rectified, no amount of paperwork-processing fees can procure a legal Fire NOC.

DFS routinely refuses renewals—even to marquee institutions like AIIMS and Vigyan Bhawan—when systems are defunct (The Times of India, The Economic Times).


4. What residents & office-owners should demand

  1. Full transparency.
    Circulate the DFS letter in the RWA group and pin it on noticeboards/portals.
  2. Detailed rectification plan & budget.
    • Vendor quotes for pump overhaul, hose-reel repair, tank waterproofing, and electrical trunking.
    • Project timeline leading to re-inspection.
  3. Separate accounting.
    Renewal fees (~? 12,500 online to DFS) are minor; repairs will cost multiples. Insist that any ? 1,000 collection be held in an escrow/account earmarked for fire-safety works, not general funds.
  4. Independent verification.
    Hire a third-party fire-safety consultant to certify completion before calling DFS again.
  5. Interim precautions.
    Until the NOC is granted, arrange for:
    • Fire watch personnel during business hours.
    • Clear, illuminated evacuation routes.
    • Immediate removal of combustible material from passages.

5. Legal & financial stakes

  • Liability: Directors of the management body can face prosecution under DFSA 2007 for allowing occupancy without a valid NOC.
  • Insurance: Most property insurers void fire claims if mandatory protection systems were out of order.
  • Business interruption: DFS can recommend sealing of premises operating in flagrant violation.

6. Call to action

Safety certificates aren’t rubber stamps—they’re a verdict on whether people can escape a fire alive.

Share this post with every unit holder in Jaina Tower-II. Ask pointed questions at the next RWA meeting:

  • How soon will the hose-reels, hydrants, and pumps be functional?
  • Which contractor is repairing the overhead tank?
  • When will exposed wiring in common areas be trunked or rerouted?
  • What date has been scheduled for DFS re-inspection?

Collectively pressing for action over collection is the only way to turn that rejection letter into a renewed, valid Fire-NOC—and, more importantly, a safer workplace for everyone.


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