Delhi death toll rises to 60, rescuers hunt for survivors (Lead)
November 16th, 2010 - 12:02 pm ICT by IANSNew Delhi, Nov 16 (IANS) Rescuers continued to search for possible survivors under tonnes of debris of an illegally-built high-rise building here that caved in killing at least 60 people, authorities said Tuesday, the day after the tragedy.
Police slapped a case of negligence against the building’s owner, Amrik Singh, who is on the run ever since all seven floors of the building collapsed Monday night in Laxmi Nagar, entombing dozens of labourers from Bihar West Bengal.
A police spokesperson told IANS that the death toll Tuesday morning stood at 60. About 80 others were admitted to four hospitals, many of them battling for lives after receiving head injuries as bricks and cement rained on them.
The tragedy took place in the congested locality near the Yamuna river in east Delhi around 8.15 p.m.
Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit Tuesday squarely blamed the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) for the collapse, saying the building was constructed without authorisation.
“There is definitely negligence on the part of MCD,” said Dikshit, describing the accident as “unprecedented”. “Without an NOC (no objection certificate), no building is considered livable. It was an unauthorised building.”
“Now the priority is to take out the debris and rescue people,” she added.
The rescue work continued through the night but the work, officials admitted, was daunting considering the scale of the tragedy - seven collapsed floors and several tonnes of bricks, mortars and entire cemented floors.
Delhi Fire Service chief R.C. Sharma said the rescue work would go on until it was abundantly clear that all those in the building had been rescued.
But since the building was illegal, it was unclear how many people lived there. Locals said the owner had rented out every room to workers looking for a roof and that the base of the building had weakened after this year’s flooding.
Some residents insisted that an illegal ice cream factory also functioned in the building - a clear indication, they said, of connivance by local civic officials.
The first to reach the tragedy site were nearby residents who rushed after hearing the roaring noise of the collapsing building.
Once the dust settled, people began to frantically rescue the injured - and remove the visibly dead - with bare hands before police and fire brigade arrived.
Delhi’s Finance Minister A.K. Walia, who is the legislator from the area, said the authorities had been trying to drain out rain water from the basement of the building for weeks. But every time this was done, the water simply flowed back.
- Delhi death toll rises to 65, rescue efforts on (Second lead) - Nov 16, 2010
- Delhi building collapse toll 66, over 30 still feared trapped (Roundup) - Nov 16, 2010
- Blame game in midst of building collapse tragedy - Nov 16, 2010
- Toll in Delhi building collapse rises to 64, rescue work still on - Nov 16, 2010
- Four killed in Delhi building collapse - Dec 03, 2011
- Delhi building collapse: 20 still buried under debris - Nov 17, 2010
- Two hurt in roof collapse during MCD demolition - Jan 05, 2011
- Death toll reaches 69 in Delhi building collapse - Nov 18, 2010
- Delhi building collapse: Owner claims innocence, toll may rise (Second Lead) - Nov 17, 2010
- Two arrested for Delhi building collapse - Dec 04, 2011
- Rescuers struggle to save buried workers in Punjab (Lead) - Apr 17, 2012
- Five hurt in Delhi roof collapse - Dec 04, 2011
- Building collapse toll rises to seven, three critical - Sep 28, 2011
- Delhi building collapse: 20 still missing, probe ordered (Roundup) - Nov 17, 2010
- Smoke and debris: Gutted shoe factory still hot - Apr 29, 2011
Tags: amrik singh, bihar, chief minister, delhi fire, east delhi, fire service, head injuries, labourers, mortars, municipal corporation of delhi, municipal corporation of delhi mcd, objection certificate, police spokesperson, r c sharma, rescuers, service chief, sheila dikshit, tuesday morning, west bengal, yamuna river