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MUMBAI: At least 10 people died after a three-story residential building collapsed in India on Monday (September 21), authorities said.
The accident in the city of Bhiwandi, neighboring India’s financial capital Mumbai, occurred at around 3.40 am (5.40 am Singapore time), local authorities said.
“Ten people have died, we have rescued eleven people alive,” an official from the Thane municipal authority, which oversees Bhiwandi, told AFP.
Some residents were trying to get out of the building after cracks appeared in the middle of the night when it collapsed.
“Half of the building collapsed and it is feared that between 25 and 26 families will be trapped,” Pankaj Ashiya, Bhiwandi municipal commissioner, told reporters.
It was not yet clear why the building, which had 54 apartments on three floors, collapsed.
More than 40 emergency workers had arrived on the scene, the official said, including a team of 30 rescuers from the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF).
NDRF Director General Satya Narayan Pradhan tweeted that teams armed with specialized equipment and sniffer dogs were trying to rescue 20 to 25 people reportedly trapped.
Television broadcasts of the incident showed images of a rescue dog running over the rubble of the building in Bhiwandi.
Images aired on the NDRF’s official Twitter page showed emergency workers combing concrete and brick rubble with power lines dangling overhead.
Reuters partner ANI reported that a child had been rescued.
According to the Associated Press, at least 11 people were injured when the building collapsed, Ashiya said.
He said the building was over 30 years old and in need of repairs, which could not be carried out due to the coronavirus shutdown.
Police teams, city workers and members of the NDRF cleared debris in narrow neighborhood lanes, trying to reach people calling for help under the rubble, a Reuters witness said.
“We heard a noise and I noticed there were cracks in the floor,” resident Sharif Ansari, 35, told Reuters.
“I woke up my neighbors and my wife and we rushed everyone down.”
Ansari said he went back upstairs to alert more people and was on the first floor with a few other residents when the building collapsed.
“We jumped from there and managed to escape, but there are at least 60 other people trapped,” he said.
Building collapses are common in India, particularly during seasonal monsoon rains, due to old and often illegal buildings.
Last month, more than a dozen people were killed when a building collapsed in the industrial city of Mahad, 165 kilometers south of Mumbai.
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