Monday, October 31, 2011

51 killed in Delhi building collapse .


Rescue workers search for survivors under the rubble of a collapsed building in New Delhi November 16, 2010. At least 55 people were killed and 75 injured after a multi-storey building collapsed in east Delhi late on Monday, local media said. Photo by Reuters.




Relief workers evacuate a victim found in the rubble in New Delhi on November 16, 2010 after a building collapsed late on November 15. At least 60 people died when the four-storey building in a crowded area of New Delhi collapsed, officials said, as rescuers hunted for more victims trapped in the rubble. Photo by AFP.




Rescue workers search for survivors under the rubble of a collapsed building in New Delhi November 16, 2010. At least 55 people were killed and 75 injured after a multi-storey building collapsed in east Delhi late on Monday, local media said.



Relief workers try to pull out a victim (bottom L) trapped under the rubble in New Delhi on November 16, 2010 after a building collapsed late on November 15. At least 60 people died when the four-storey building in a crowded area of New Delhi collapsed, officials said, as rescuers hunted for more victims trapped in the rubble. Photo by AFP.






NEW DELHI: At least 51 people died when a four-storey building in a crowded area of New Delhi collapsed, officials said Tuesday, as rescuers hunted for more victims feared trapped in the rubble.

Officials said the building in eastern Delhi may have been weakened by heavy flooding brought on by some of the strongest monsoon rains in decades, which burst the banks of the nearby river Yamuna that runs through Delhi.

Rescue workers and residents worked through the night trying to remove debris after the building caved in late Monday in the congested working-class Lalita Park area of Laxmi Nagar, where narrow lanes made it difficult for rescue services to bring in heavy lifting equipment.


“Fifty-one people people were killed and 76 were injured in the incident,” a fire brigade official said, according to the Press Trust of India news agency, giving an updated death toll today.

Witnesses said they heard shouts for help from under the debris, PTI said, while local residents complained that power cuts and the absence of cranes hampered the rescue efforts initially.

Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit suggested the building might have been an unauthorised construction, and officials said an inquiry has been launched into the disaster.


I think it is the carelessness of the builder who did not build a strong enough building to withstand a flood that came about a month ago,” she told the NDTV news channel yesterday.

M.P. Singh in the Delhi police control room told AFP that police had identified the owner of the building and would be questioning him shortly.

The building is believed to have been mostly residential, but some reports said it also contained a cloth exporting company and a food snacks group.


Many of the injured and dead were pulled by bystanders from the crumpled slabs of concrete and pulverised bricks and mortar piled up at the site of the collapsed building, witnesses said.

Enforcement of building regulations is lax in the Indian capital and minor accidents are common. The construction industry is also riddled with corruption, leading to the use of substandard materials.

The much-delayed and over-budget Delhi Commonwealth Games in October shone an unflattering light on many industry practices.



An investigation by India’s leading anti-corruption body concluded that sub-standard concrete and anti-corrosion coatings for steel had been used in a host of public works, while
safety certificates also appeared to have been faked.



©2011. Fathir Yusoff article. All Rights Reserved.

3 comments:

  1. 1. This article is an eye-opener for us which deals with constructions.

    2. You have stated and bold the word "UNAUTHORIZED" Construction. What do you mean by that? What are the criteria of an authorized construction then?

    3. Okay, so safety certs have been faked. I believe bribery is the main reason. What should they do / authority do to avoid fake certs being around?

    4. If you are an Safety and Health Officer in charge on this building, what would you do to improve the construction and avoid this situation?

    ReplyDelete
  2. http://www.dawn.com/2010/11/16/fifty-one-killed-in-delhi-building-collapse.html

    ReplyDelete