The Freeman

Four dead, 63 hurt in NY bldg collapse

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NEW YORK — A major explosion caused by a gas leak flattened two Manhattan apartment buildings in a fireball Wednesday, killing at least four people and injuring 63 others.

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio called the incident “a tragedy of the worst kind” and his office said nine residents from the two collapsed buildings were still unaccounte­d for by nightfall.

Firefighte­rs battled throughout the afternoon to extinguish the heavy fire in East Harlem, where witnesses compared the scene of twisted metal, thick white smoke and dusty rubble to a war zone.

Late Wednesday the death toll was raised from three to four, said US media outlets CNN, ABC and CBS.

The explosion sparked inevitable reminders for some New Yorkers of the 9/11 terror attacks in 2001 that brought down the Twin Towers. Other witnesses said it felt like an earthquake.

There were 15 apartments in the two buildings that collapsed, de Blasio and city officials told reporters near the scene at 116th Street and Park Avenue, a mainly Latino community.

Around 15 minutes before the blast, energy company Con Edison received a call from an adjoining apartment building alerting maintenanc­e staff to the smell of gas.

The explosion struck around 9:30 am (1330 GMT) and the New York Fire Department said firefighte­rs were on the scene two minutes later.

“There was a major explosion that destroyed two buildings. The explosion was based on a gas leak,” de Blasio said. It was the first deadly disaster of its kind to strike the city of eight million since the Democrat took office in January and will raise concerns about safety in less affluent neighborho­ods.

“There is a tremendous amount of anxiety, but suffice it to say that every effort is being expended to locate each and every one of these (missing) individual­s,” the mayor said.

The death toll rose to three as dusk fell, a spokesman for New York Fire Department told AFP.

The Mexican Foreign Ministry said two women who were among the dead were Mexicans, along with one of those injured.

Lamenting the “deeply unfortunat­e incident,” the ministry said in a brief statement that Mexican consular staff remain in close contact with New York authoritie­s.

Four different hospitals told AFP they treated a total of 63 patients, the vast majority with minor injuries.

A spokesman for Mount Sinai hospital said 22 people, including three children, were treated. Nineteen were discharged.

One woman was “critical but stable” with head trauma and two other people were still being evaluated in the emergency room, the spokesman said.

The New York City Health and Hospitals Corporatio­n tweeted that its Harlem and Metropolit­an Hospitals received a total of 30 patients who suffered a variety of injuries.

A spokeswoma­n for New York- Presbyteri­an Hospital said that doctors received 11 patients, with 10 still under evaluation.

Hundreds of police and more than 250 firefighte­rs were on site with emergency trucks, as a dense column of smoke spewed into the sky over the Metro-North railway line.

The blast forced the suspension of train services in and out of Grand Central Station in midtown Manhattan for part of the day.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? Firefighte­rs from the Fire Department of New York respond to a five-alarm fire and building collapse at 1646 Park Ave in the Harlem neighborho­od of Manhattan in New York City.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE Firefighte­rs from the Fire Department of New York respond to a five-alarm fire and building collapse at 1646 Park Ave in the Harlem neighborho­od of Manhattan in New York City.

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