Award Banner
Award Banner

Man rescued after 62 hours under collapsed building in India

Man rescued after 62 hours under collapsed building in India
Rescuers searching for survivors on March 20, 2019, after a building collapsed in the Dharwad district of Karnataka.
PHOTO: AFP

NEW DELHI - Indian emergency workers on Friday (March 22) rescued a man more than 62 hours after he became trapped under the debris of a collapsed building that killed at least 17 people, officials told AFP.

Emergency workers were searching for 10 more people four days after the five-storey building in southern Karnataka state caved in, officials said.

A video of the rescue operation shared by state fire and emergency services head M.N. Reddi showed more than a dozen personnel cheering on as the man was pulled out alive from the rubble.

The man had no visible injuries and was hugged by members of the rescue team before he walked away from the debris and was rushed to a nearby hospital.

As many as 54 people have been rescued alive by the team of around 400, who have been scouring through tonnes of concrete and steel after the latest tragedy on Tuesday.

"Those rescued have been moved to the hospital and five persons have been arrested in the matter," emergency official Srikant, who goes by only one name, told AFP.

Police have charged the owner of the construction company - one of the five arrested - with manslaughter.

Building collapses are frequent in India. Many firms use cheap materials and bribe officials to evade regulations, while on-site safety is lax.

Heavy earth-movers and rescuers with specialised equipment and sniffer dogs were deployed in the increasingly desperate operation.

The victims were mostly from northern Indian states who came to the region for work.

In September 2018, five people were killed after a Delhi apartment block collapsed. Months earlier, a six-storey building in the capital gave way, killing nine.

Many Indian cities have seen rapid growth in the last few decades, with new buildings often built without proper quality supervision and the older ones poorly maintained.

This website is best viewed using the latest versions of web browsers.