'An e-bike fire killed my sister in her home'

"When you do come to realise that there's something wrong with your bike, it is going to be too late because we are talking about a very, very fast-developing fire that you will have not a chance to get past," says a sister in mourning.
Ehsia Johnson-Mall still struggles to come to terms with the loss of her sister, Natasha, at the age of 27 in November.
Natasha, along with her partner, 24-year-old Karlo Bogdan, died at the home they shared in Coventry after a battery Karlo had fitted to an e-bike caught fire.
Now, Ms Johnson-Mall is trying to raise awareness of the dangers of using home conversion kits to replace e-bike batteries.

The deaths of the couple were ruled as accidental at an inquest in February.
An investigation by West Midlands Fire Service (WMFS) said the blaze started when the battery ignited and "rapidly escalated into an intense blaze".
It said that over the past two years it had seen a 50% increase in fires caused by lithium-ion batteries, which are often found on e-bikes.

WMFS said it was concerned that people underestimated the dangers posed, especially if the batteries degrade.
"The battery that we believe Karlo had purchased was actually subject to a product recall before he'd actually purchased it due to… other fires that have happened nationally," said fire investigation officer Annette Carrington. "It's obvious that this risk was unknown to Karlo."

It is thought that nationally, 15 people have died in fires caused by e-bike batteries.
Ms Johnson-Mall believes the night the fire that killed her sister broke out was the first night the bike was left charging in the hall - and is determined to make people aware of the risks.
"I know Karlo would be absolutely devastated at himself," she said. "Knowing that he had an item that was his possession that had caused this fatality."

A memorial bench has been placed outside Natasha and Karlo's home, but Ms Johnson-Mall wants her sister's legacy to be that no other lives are lost in the same way.
"The fact that we've got to sit on a bench with her name on it and not sit with her on a garden bench is just unfair beyond belief."

Ms Carrington agrees that people need to understand the dangers.
"Imagine 70 or 80 fireworks going off at one point," she explained. "I would never advise anyone to carry out their own conversion.
"Is a life worth the risk? I would say no."
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