MUMBAI, India
Rescue workers used excavators to clear mangled metal debris in their final search for survivors trapped underneath a billboard that collapsed in India's financial capital of Mumbai, killing at least 14 people.
The billboard, bigger than an
Olympic-sized swimming pool, crushed a fuel station, homes and cars during a
thunderstorm on Monday, trapping more than a 100 people, according to
authorities.
Rescuers worked through the
night to pull people from the debris on the side of a busy arterial road in the
Mumbai suburb of Ghatkopar.
Some 75 wounded were rescued
and 14 bodies found, the city's civic body, the Brihanmumbai Municipal
Corporation, said.
"The operation was very
challenging due to the weight of the structure and the presence of flammable
liquid and gas at the site," Mohsen Shahedi, a senior National Disaster
Response Force officer, told Reuters.
Shahedi said the rescue
operation was nearly over except for one last sweeping search.
"We believe there is no
one else stuck under the debris," he said.
Videos showed the towering
billboard billowing in the wind before collapsing as a dust storm and rain
lashed the city, bringing traffic to a standstill and disrupting flights at
Mumbai airport
The agency owning the billboard did not have a permit from the BMC, the municipal body said in a statement. The hoarding measured about 1,338 square metres (14,400 square feet), it said, nine times more than the maximum permitted size.
The BMC said it had instructed
the agency to remove all its hoardings immediately.
"To prevent such
accidents from happening again, instructions have been given to conduct a
structural audit of all hoardings in Mumbai and immediately take down dangerous
ones," Eknath Shinde, the chief minister of Maharashtra state of which Mumbai
is the capital, said in a post on X.
"Out of 1,300 such
hoardings in Mumbai, around 30 have not submitted a structural stability report
that is mandatory every two years," said Bhushan Gagrani, who heads the
BMC. "We are looking into that."
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