Rescuers have pulled 13 more bodies from the rubble of a
building that collapsed last weekend in southern India, raising the death toll
to at least 55, officials said Thursday.
The 11-storey apartment tower on the outskirts of Tamil
Nadu’s state capital Chennai, which was still under construction, came crashing
down Saturday following heavy rains, killing mainly labourers.
Some 27 people have been rescued from the rubble so far. It
is not known how many people were inside the building at the time of the
collapse.
“There is no question of winding up the rescue operations
any time soon,” Sagar told AFP by telephone.
“As we’ve said repeatedly, the (rescue) efforts will
continue till the very last,” he said.
“We don’t know if there are more people buried under the
debris. To find that out we have to continue the work.”
Rescuers have been working almost round the clock, using
drills, mechanical diggers and heavy-cutting equipment to break through slabs
of concrete.
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa Jayaram, meanwhile,
announced that a one-man commission will investigate the disaster.
The commission will look into the circumstances that led to
the collapse and “fix responsibility”, she said in a statement, according to
the Press Trust of India news agency.
Six people have been arrested so far for negligence,
including the chief builder and the architect.
The collapse came only hours after a dilapidated apartment
block crumbled in New Delhi, killing 10 people including five children.
A massive influx of people to cities in search of jobs and a
shortage of low-cost housing has fuelled fast construction of buildings across
the country, often using substandard material.
Millions also live in dilapidated old buildings that have
frequently caved in during heavy rains.
Last September, more than 50 people were crushed to death
when a five-storey building collapsed in India’s financial hub Mumbai.
Most of the victims of the Chennai tragedy were construction
workers, who were reportedly in the building to collect their wages.
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