The Borneo Post

24 people killed after wall collapsed on Indian wedding party

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JAIPUR, India: A wall crashed down on an Indian wedding party during a storm killing at least 24 people including four children, police said yesterday, with one rescuer describing the scene as “horrific”.

Dozens more were injured when the four-metre high concrete wall collapsed, trapping guests who had taken shelter from violent rain in a tin shack on Wednesday night, police superinten­dent Anil Tank told AFP.

“We worked through the night,” one rescue worker at the scene in Bharatpur, Rajasthan state, told India TV news network.

“We tried to rescue as many people as possible, the scene was horrific.”

Tank, a senior officer in Bharatpur, said 26 people were injured, 15 of them seriously. Television footage showed anxious relatives standing next to hospital beds.

Police have launched an investigat­ion and detained a wedding hall manager on charges of causing death by negligence.

“We have registered a case and taken one of the managers of the banquet hall into custody,” district magistrate Narendra Kumar Gupta told reporters.

“We will investigat­e if the hall owners had a valid licence. In case they did not have a licence, appropriat­e action will be taken against them.”

At the accident scene, food for the wedding feast lay scattered across the floor, which had caved in places under the weight of the collapsed wall.

A stage traditiona­lly set aside for the bride and the groom had also incurred severe damage.

Gupta also announced compensati­on of 50,000 rupees ( US$ 775) for the family of each person killed.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the incident had pained him “beyond words”.

“My thoughts are with the families of the deceased. I hope the injured recover soon,” he tweeted.

Indian weddings are often grandiose affairs with huge numbers of guests and lavish ceremonies that run for several days.

Many families pour their life savings into them, and it is not uncommon for affluent urban families to host thousands of guests.

In 2014, one guest was killed when a floating platform carrying the bride and groom that was suspended from the end of a crane collapsed onto a wedding party.

Disasters more often result from celebrator­y firing into the air, particular­ly in rural north India where gun ownership is widespread. — AFP

 ??  ?? Onlookers and police stand amid the debris of the wall that collapsed on a crowd of people celebratin­g a wedding, in Bharatpur, in the desert state of Rajasthan, India. — Reuters photo
Onlookers and police stand amid the debris of the wall that collapsed on a crowd of people celebratin­g a wedding, in Bharatpur, in the desert state of Rajasthan, India. — Reuters photo

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