Flames and smoke rise from a fire that broke out in the Gul Plaza Shopping Centre in Karachi, Pakistan, January 18, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer Image:Reuters/Stringer

More than 65 missing, six dead after huge Karachi mall fire

· Japan Today

KARACHI — Firefighters in Karachi searched on Sunday for more than 65 missing people after a massive fire tore through a shopping ‌mall in the historic downtown district, killing six and reducing parts of the building to rubble.

Videos showed flames rising from the building as firefighters labored through the night to stop the ⁠blaze, which started on Saturday night, from spreading in ‍the dense business district. After fighting the flames for over ‍24 hours, firefighters ‍began cooling the steaming rubble of the nearly collapsed structure.

Firefighters told Pakistan's ⁠local television station Geo News that the lack of ventilation in the mall, which houses over 1,200 shops, caused ​the building to fill with smoke and slowed rescue efforts.

"It appears to have been caused by a circuit breaker,” Sindh police chief Javed Alam Odho told reporters at the site, according to Dawn News.

“The layout and construction of this market was such, and secondly, the nature ⁠of the items in it — such as carpets, blankets and other objects made of resins — so the fire is still simmering because of these.”

Karachi Mayor Murtaza Wahab told reporters at the scene that 65 people were still missing.

Rescue officials said six people had been killed and 20 others were wounded.

According to media reports, people chanted slogans criticizing the mayor who came to the site after 23 hours.

Hundreds of people had gathered around the building, including distraught store owners whose businesses had turned to ash.

"We've been left high and dry, reduced to zero; 20 years of hard work, all gone," shop owner Yasmeen Bano said.

The fire erupted on Saturday night, ​with rescue services receiving a call at 10:38 p.m. reporting that ground-floor shops at the multi-storey Gul Plaza shopping centre were ablaze.

"When ⁠we arrived, the fire from the ground floor had spread to the upper floors, and almost the entire building was already engulfed in flames," Rescue 1122 spokesperson Hassanul Haseeb Khan told ‍Reuters.

Images of the mall's interior revealed the charred remains of stores and ‌a bright orange glow ‌as flames continued to rise throughout the ‍building.

By Sunday evening, the blackened and broken metal frame of the building was strewn on ‌the street alongside fallen air conditioners and some store signboards.

Rescue ‍workers said that parts of the building had started to collapse and that the whole structure could come down.

© Thomson Reuters 2026.