Rescuers today called off operations at the Mumbai building collapse site believing that no more persons were trapped under the debris, over 24 hours after the tragedy killed 33 people, including a 20-day-old child.
The 117-year-old building in the congested Bhendi Bazar area in south Mumbai came crashing down yesterday morning, two days after torrential rain brought the maximum city to its knees.
“Rescue operations have been called off as it does not seem that anybody else still remains trapped under the debris. However, some fire brigade personnel along with a police team will remain at the site as a precautionary measure,” a senior fire brigade official told PTI.
Personnel from the fire brigade, NDRF and the civic body have scoured the debris left by the crash of the five-storey building, pulling out the dead and injured.
Around 14 people injured in the collapse are undergoing treatment at the state-run J J Hospital, a senior police official said.
“A total of 33 people have died, including a 20-day old male child. Apart from these, 14 are currently admitted in hospital, 11 of them are residents of the building. Two persons are in a critical state,” Dr T P Lahane, Dean of JJ hospital told PTI.
Three fire brigade personnel are also admitted, he said.
The dead include 23 men, nine women and a 20-day-old male child, police said.
Earlier in the day, police sources had put the toll at 34, which was later corrected to 33.
The search operations had continued through last night.
Located in the congested Muslim-dominated Pakmodia Street, the dilapidated Husaini Building housed several families and godowns.
It also housed a play school but children had not arrived yet when the tragedy occurred.
Tragedy struck barely two days after torrential rain brought the city to its knees, crippling road, rail and air services, inundating homes and leaving at least 10 people dead. Many suspect the downpour caused further damage to the ramshackle structure, causing it to crash.
Some residents in the locality claimed that several families lived in crammed rooms in the structure, which was declared “unsafe” by the Maharashtra Housing and Area Development Authority (MHADA).
The Saifee Burhani Upliftment Trust (SBUT), which was to have undertaken redevelopment of the old structure, said the building housed a total of 13 tenants — 12 residential and one commercial.
“Of them, the trust had already shifted seven families in 2013-14,” it said in a statement.
“MHADA notices dated March 28 and May 20, 2011, declaring the building dilapidated, were issued along with an offer of transit accommodation to the remaining tenants and occupants,” it said.
The Maharashtra government had announced a solatium of Rs 5 lakh each for the next of kin of the deceased.
Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, who visited the site yesterday, also said the entire medical expenses of those injured would be borne by the state government.
This was the second major building collapse in the city in just over a month, after the crash of a residential complex in suburban Ghatkopar on July 25, which left 17 people dead.