Stabroek News

Nearly 100 people missing as oceanfront Miami-area building collapses

-

SURFSIDE, Fla., (Reuters) Rescue crews picked through tons of rubble yesterday looking for survivors after the collapse of part of an oceanfront apartment tower overnight near Miami, where officials reported at least one person dead and nearly 100 missing.

Search teams detected sounds of banging and other noises but no voices coming from the mounds of debris hours after a large section of the Champlain Towers South condominiu­m in Surfside, a barrier island town across Biscayne Bay from the city, crumbled to the ground, authoritie­s said.

What caused the 40-year-old highrise to tumble into a heap in a matter of seconds was not immediatel­y known, though local officials said the 12-story tower was undergoing roof constructi­on and other repairs.

Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava told reporters 99 people remained unaccounte­d for some 18 hours after the collapse, though some may not have been in the building at the time. Another 102 individual­s whose whereabout­s were initially unknown have since been located and "declared safe," she said.

A fire official said earlier that 35 people were evacuated from the portion of the high-rise left standing, and response teams using trained dogs and drones in the search of survivors pulled two individual­s from the rubble - one of them was dead.

"Fire and rescue are in there with their search team, with their dogs. It's a very dangerous site right now. Very unstable," Miami-Dade Police Director Freddy Ramirez said earlier in the day. "They're in search-andrescue mode, and they will be in that mode for a while. They are not quitting. They're going to work through the night. They are not stopping."

Ramirez said the numbers of known casualties and people missing were likely to fluctuate.

"I don't want to set false expectatio­ns," he said. "This is a very tragic situation for those families and for the community."

Said Oliver Gilbert, vice chair of the county board of commission­ers: "I just have to implore everybody, just pray."

Sally Heyman, a Miami-Dade County commission­er, told CNN early in the day that officials knew of 51 individual­s who "supposedly" live in the building, home to a mix of year-round residents and part-time "snow birds" who spend the winter months in Florida.

Officials said the complex, built in 1981, was going through a recertific­ation process requiring repairs, with another building under constructi­on on an adjacent site.

"There were structural issues obviously - the building did collapse," Levine Cava told reporters. She said structural engineers were working with firefighte­rs to shore up the part of the building left standing.

Jenny Urgelles awoke to news that her parents' building had collapsed. She called them, but their phones went straight to voicemail, she told WSVN 7 News.

"I am holding on to hope," she told the local Fox affiliate.

 ??  ?? Part of the collapsed building
Part of the collapsed building

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana