commercial hub, Reuters reports.
Nine people had been confirmed dead, a
municipal authority official said, while rescuers estimated more than 16
had been injured and taken to hospital.
“Rescue
operations are already underway. We have sent 12 fire brigade vehicles
to the spot. Ambulances are also ready to take the victims to the
hospital,” a fire control room official said.
The
collapse is the second in Mumbai in a little over a month. In July, 17
people were killed when a four-storey building crumbled after undergoing
suspected unauthorized renovations.
Police had yet to determine what caused the
collapse on Thursday, which was again testing the city’s rescue
operations after 14 people were killed by floods from heavy monsoon
rains earlier in the week.
A police official
told Reuters nine families were living in the old building, in the
Dongri neighborhood, an area of narrow streets with closely packed
buildings, some nearly a century old.
Adjacent buildings were evacuated after the
collapse, officials at the site said. The narrow streets made it
difficult to bring in excavators, they said.
A large team from the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) was also involved in the rescue operations.
The
building housed a sweet shop warehouse on the ground floor and most
families living on the higher floors were in their houses as the
collapse happened early in the morning, officials said.
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