Six killed as building collapses in Egypt
ALEXANDRIA: At least six people died when an old four-storey building collapsed in the coastal city of Alexandria in northern Egypt, local officials said on Thursday.
Authorities had issued several restoration orders for the old building, which collapsed on Wednesday evening, but they had been ignored, Alexandria province Governor Mohamed Al Sherief told reporters at the scene.
Two families were living in the building and those killed included three men and three women, officials said.
Authorities have evacuated the building next to the one that collapsed ater cracks appeared, according to residents.
Building collapses are common in Egypt because of lax building standards and poor maintenance.
Separately, it was reported that Egypt is rushing ahead with plans for an expansion of its metro and railway networks and is near agreement with Bechtel Corp to implement Cairo’s sixth metro line, Transport Minister Kamel Al Wazir said.
Speaking to the American Chamber of Commerce, Wazir said most of the bigger transport projects, which also include dry ports and river transport, should be finished by the end of 2024.
Egypt was working on a memorandum of understanding with Bechtel for feasibility studies and implementation of the $5 billion, 30 km sixth metro line, he said.
“Just yesterday we had the contracts and we quickly reached near-agreement,” Wazir said.
“We told them to submit a writen offer. If we reach agreement we will begin working at once and expedite all the contracts and agreements.”
Egypt had lined up finance for the metro line from Canada, America, Britain, France and Japan, Wazir said. He did not give its route, but reports have said it will run east of the Nile from north to south.
Last week, Egypt’s Orascom Construction said it and Japan’s Mitsubishi Corporation had signed an $800 million contract with Egypt’s National
Authority for Tunnels for work on the 19km first phase of Cairo’s fourth metro line, with financing from Japan. That line will extend underground from central Cairo to the Pyramids to the west, connecting 16 stations.
Among planned new railways around Cairo are a 49km, $175 million line from Sixth of October City to the Nile north of Cairo, a 69km, $235 million cargo line from Bilbeis to eastern Cairo and a $435 million, 227 km dual line to Atay Al Baroud on the western edge of the Delta.