Metro

‘DWI’ firefighter called incoherent after ramming pregnant ma

The city firefighter who slammed into a 7-months-pregnant Bronx woman — forcing the emergency delivery of a baby now on life support — claimed he had just two beers, even though he was slurring and could barely stand, sources said on Friday.

Off-duty Lt. Sean Farrell was “unsteady on his feet, incoherent, and had bloodshot and watery eyes” when he was arrested after hitting the woman and her pal on Wednesday, one source said.

“Yes, I was driving. I was just making a turn on Westchester [Avenue], and all of a sudden, boom! I hit those ladies,” Farrell said, according to a criminal complaint.

Farrell, who refused to take a Breathalyzer, was arraigned late Thursday night on charges of vehicular assault, assault, reckless driving and drunken driving, court papers state.

His bail was set at $200,000 and his license was suspended, the Bronx District Attorney’s Office said.

Mantaz Begum, 42, had an emergency C-section at Jacobi Medical Center, and her premature infant girl is on a ventilator because her tiny lungs aren’t fully developed, police sources said.

The family named the baby Mahzabin, a traditional Bengali name that means “power.”

Her big sister Mousumi Akhter, 17, picked it out.

“I was searching on the ­Internet for an Islamic girl name. I wanted it to be a powerful name because something bad happened to her but she survived,” said Akhter, as she put her hand over her heart and smiled.

“I want her to get healthier and stronger. I know in my heart that she is going to be OK.”

Akhter was furious at Farrell.

“He was drinking, that makes me upset. It is not even the first time and that makes me more upset,” she said.

“Don’t drink; you almost killed my mom. That’s not only one life, that’s two lives.”

Farrell was busted for drunken driving in 2010, when cops intervened in a road-rage incident ­after Farrell allegedly cut off a taxi driver on the Upper West Side, authorities said.

Begum’s nephew, pharmacist Mohammed Khan, 33, said his aunt was in excruciating pain.

“When she talks you can see the pain in her face — you see her grimace,” Khan said.

Additional reporting by Josh Saul