San Francisco Chronicle

At least 10 die in Mumbai after building cavein

- By Rafiq Maqbool Rafiq Maqbool is an Associated Press writer.

MUMBAI, India — A fourstory dilapidate­d residentia­l building collapsed Tuesday in Mumbai, India’s financial and entertainm­ent capital, killing at least 10 people, an official said. Rescuers were searching for several others feared trapped in the rubble.

“The building crashed with a heavy sound and we thought there was an earthquake,” a local resident told the New Delhi Television news channel or NDTV.

Fire official Ashok Talpade said dozens of rescuers were at the site in Dongri, a crowded residentia­l section of Mumbai, and had pulled out nine survivors who were taken to a hospital. The survivors included a child who was allowed to go home after being treated.

A 16yearold girl trapped under a heavy door was taken out by rescuers after cutting through iron beams and clearing the debris using hydraulic cutters, the NDTV reported.

Talpade said police were using sniffer dogs in the rescue operation.

Television images showed people forming a human chain to help remove bricks and slabs of concrete from the site of the building, which was closely bordered on four sides by other structures.

“The problem is that the building is in a very narrow lane,” said S.N. Pradhan, head of the National Disaster Response Force. “It is only 1 to 2 feet wide. NDRF vehicles with rescue equipment can’t get to the building. So the team has marched on foot to the site and has carried all the rescue equipment needed to the site on their own.”

India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a tweet said “collapse of a building in Mumbai’s Dongri is anguishing. My condolence­s to the family of those who lost their lives.”

Maharashtr­a state’s top elected official, Devendra Fadanavis, said the building was nearly 100 years old and 15 families had been living there.

The building was being redevelope­d, “but the developer, it seems, did not do the work on time,” Fadanavis said. “All of this is a matter of investigat­ion. The whole focus now is on how to rescue the trapped people.”

Talpade said the families had been asked to vacate the dilapidate­d building some time ago but continued to live there.

Waris Pathan, an opposition lawmaker, said the building was a death trap, with authoritie­s saying they had no money to rebuild the structure.

Building collapses are common in India during the JuneSeptem­ber monsoon season, when heavy rains weaken the foundation­s of structures that are poorly constructe­d. Mumbai, where some 18 million people are crowded onto a narrow piece of land jutting into the Arabian Sea, was lashed by heavy rains early this month.

This month, at least 32 people were killed in the city’s worst monsoon flooding in at least a decade. Schools were shut, train service was disrupted, flights were canceled and several structures were knocked over, trapping people underwater.

On Sunday, a threestory building collapsed in a hilly area in the northern Indian town of Solan following heavy rains, killing 14 people. New York Times contribute­d to this

report.

 ?? Rajanish Kakade / Associated Press ?? Rescuers carry out a survivor from a fourstory residentia­l building that collapsed in Mumbai. Building collapses are common in India during the JuneSeptem­ber monsoon season,
Rajanish Kakade / Associated Press Rescuers carry out a survivor from a fourstory residentia­l building that collapsed in Mumbai. Building collapses are common in India during the JuneSeptem­ber monsoon season,

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