Bangkok Post

Death toll in collapse rises to 35

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MUMBAI: Rescue workers battled rain and cramped conditions to scour through rubble and look for possible survivors as the toll from an apartment building collapse on the outskirts of Mumbai rose to 35, a senior government official said yesterday.

“It’s been more than three days, so we don’t know if there are any survivors any more, but we are not losing hope,” Satya Pradhan, the head of the National Disaster Response Force, said.

At least eight people are still missing and rescue personnel are clearing debris to look for them, said Mr Pradhan.

The building, a three-storey structure in a narrow alley of the industrial town of Bhiwandi, on the north-east outskirts of Mumbai, collapsed early on Monday.

Rescue work has been hampered by rain and a narrow entrance to the alley, which prevented heavy equipment from being brought in to clear debris.

Officials are still investigat­ing the cause of the collapse of the structure that housed 54 apartments.

Such disasters are commonplac­e in India during the monsoon season, as the torrential rains can destabilis­e old and often illegally constructe­d buildings.

This week’s collapse however, is one of the worst such incidents in recent years around Mumbai. Last month, more than a dozen people were killed when a building collapsed in Mahad, 165km south of Mumbai.

In 2013, more than 120 people were killed in two separate building collapses around Mumbai.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Police officers watch rescue operations after a three-storey building collapsed in Bhiwandi, on the outskirts of Mumbai.
REUTERS Police officers watch rescue operations after a three-storey building collapsed in Bhiwandi, on the outskirts of Mumbai.

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