Death toll from Pakistan bomb attack reaches 102

PESHAWAR, Pakistan, July 10 (Reuters) – The death toll from a suicide attack in a volatile border region of Pakistan climbed to 102 on Saturday, showing the militants’ continued ability to stage deadly strikes despite losing ground in army offensives.

The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or Taliban Movement of Pakistan, claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack in Mohmand, a Pashtun region on the northwestern border with Afghanistan, where security forces have stepped up operations against militants in recent months.

Friday’s attack is the deadliest Pakistan has suffered since an attack on a market in Peshawar in October last year that killed 105.

Five children, aged 5 to 10, and several women were among the dead, and the toll rose on Saturday as rescuers working throughout the night found more bodies in the rubble.

“We have recovered more bodies from the debris of dozens of shops that were razed to the ground by the blast and the number of dead has increased” to 102, said Rasool Khan, assistant political agent of Mohmand.

The bomber blew himself up outside Khan’s office. There were mixed reports that a car bomb was the source of a possible second blast.

Late on Friday, a TTP spokesman in Mohmand who identified himself as Ikramullah Mohmand, said anti-Taliban tribal elders from various peace committees who had come to Khan’s office were the target.

A senior elder and two others were killed in the attack.

Among nearly 80 wounded were several people displaced by fighting between security forces and militants, who were collecting relief goods near the blast side.

The latest militant attack underscored multiple security challenges facing nuclear-armed U.S. ally Pakistan, whose support is vital in attempts to stabilise neighbouring Afghanistan, where U.S.-led NATO troops are fighting a raging Taliban insurgency.

The military has made progress over the past year when they pushed militants out of the Swat valley, northwest of Islamabad. In October the army began an offensive in the militants’ South Waziristan bastion on the Afghan border.

The offensive was extended to Orakzai in March as many of the militants who fled the South Waziristan operation took refuge there and in Mohmand. Hundreds of militants have since been killed in air strikes in the two regions.

Troops killed 20 militants in an overnight clash in South Waziristan after insurgents attacked a military checkpost in their previous stronghold of Makeen, intelligence officials said. There was no independent confirmation of the casualties.

Despite losing ground in military offensives, militants have proven their ability to bounce back, responding with a barrage of bomb attacks in towns and cities, killing hundreds of people.

Two suicide bombers killed at least 42 people in an attack on Pakistan’s most important Sufi shrine in the eastern city of Lahore last week.

While praising Pakistan’s efforts to fight homegrown militants, the unabated violence is a source of worry for the United States, which also wants Islamabad to go after Afghan militants who cross the border to attack U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

In a separate incident in Afghanistan, suspected Taliban militants attacked a bus carrying Pakistani Shi’a tribesmen travelling from the Kurram tribal region and heading to Peshawar via Afghanistan, killing 11 and wounding one, residents and government officials said.

Pakistani tribesmen take a circuitous route through Afghanistan to travel between Kurram and Peshawar as the road linking the two regions is often closed because of militants and Pakistani Army operations. [ID:nSGE669GBL]

(Writing by Augustine Anthony; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Jeremy Laurence) (E-mail: augustine.anthony@thomsonreuters.com; Reuters Messaging: augustine.anthony.reuters.com@reuters.net; Islamabad newsroom: +92 51 281 0017)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Dozens trapped after deadly building collapse

(Reuters) – Dozens of people were feared trapped and at least 20 people died after a five-storey building collapsed in the Bangladesh capital Wednesday, police and witnesses said.

World

At least 50 people were injured in the collapse of the building, which police said was badly constructed. Rescue teams were scouring through the rubble for bodies and survivors.

Nearly all the building’s tenants escaped unharmed as it started to tilt to one side, and most of the casualties were from the homes surrounding the structure, witnesses said.

“We fear the death toll may go up further as there are many people still trapped under the rubble,” a police officer on the scene said.

Dhaka is a bustling city of 12 million people, but many of its buildings are poorly constructed because of lack of supervision and enforcement of regulations.

(Reporting by Serajul Islam Quadir; Editing by David Fox)

Dozens trapped after deadly building collapse

June 2 (Reuters) – Dozens of people were feared trapped and at least 20 people died after a five-storey building collapsed in the Bangladesh capital on Wednesday, police and witnesses said.

At least 50 people were injured in the collapse of the building, which police said was badly constructed. Rescue teams were scouring through the rubble for bodies and survivors.

Nearly all the building’s tenants escaped unharmed as it started to tilt to one side, and most of the casualties were from the homes surrounding the structure, witnesses said.

“We fear the death toll may go up further as there are many people still trapped under the rubble,” a police officer on the scene said.

Dhaka is a bustling city of 12 million people, but many of its buildings are poorly constructed because of lack of supervision and enforcement of regulations. (Reporting by Serajul Islam Quadir; Editing by David Fox)

Hitler’s Berlin bunker: unseen pictures revealed

London, May 5 (ANI): After more than six decades since the end of Adolf Hitler’s regime in a Berlin bunker, many unpublished photographs of the underground lair have been revealed to the public.

These pictures, published by mirror.co.uk, capture the incredible drama of the Second World War’s final act, when Russian shells bombed the city to rubble.

While one picture shows the command centre after it had been burned by retreating German troops and then looted by Russians, another is that of American journalists examining the bloodstained sofa where Hitler shot himself after Braun took poison.

Life magazine’s William Vandivert took these photographs. (ANI)

LTTE chief V. Prabhakaran’s ancestral house destroyed

Colombo, May 4 (ANI): The Sri Lankan Army has reportedly demolished the ancestral home of the late Tamil Tiger rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, inviting criticism from local Tamil lawmakers.

The house was situated in the Valvettithurai area of the northern Jaffna peninsula.

“The Sri Lankan Army was guarding this place. They were not allowing anyone to visit the area. They have been demolishing the house bit by bit for the past few weeks,” former Tamil Member of Parliament, Sivajilingam, was quoted by the BBC, as saying.

“I have written to the president (Mahinda Rajapaksa) about this. But when I went back there [on Wednesday] the house was reduced to rubble,” Sivajilingam said recently.

Prabhakaran spent his childhood at the house with his siblings. His father, Thiruvenkadam Velupillai, died earlier this year and was cremated in Valvettithurai.

The house was badly damaged during army operations of 1987. The rebel leader”s family had left it four years earlier.

The end of fighting in the north has attracted thousands of tourists from the south, and for many Prabhakaran”s house was among the must-see attractions in Jaffna.

“Thousands of people were coming and seeing the house everyday. This might have angered the authorities,” Sivajilingam said.

The Sri Lankan army, however, has declined that it has demolished the house.

“It is not correct. We completely deny this allegation,” army spokesman Prasad Samarasinge said.

“We have not destroyed any house of Prabhakaran in the country. The army has not done a thing like that,” he added.

According to the report, Tamil sources say the military wants to rid Sri Lanka of any memory of the LTTE movement.

They claim a number of Tamil Tiger war graves have also been destroyed over the past year. (ANI)

Tiny tot, grandma saved 123 hours after deadly China quake

Qinghai (China), Apr.20 (ANI): Rescuers in China’s Sichuan province have pulled out two survivors from the rubble of last week’s devastating earthquake.

A four-year-old girl and her 68-year-old grandmother, who had been trapped for about 123 hours, were miraculously retrieved from rubble in a village in earthquake hit Yushu prefecture.

The girl, Tsering Palkyi, suffered only minor injuries and has returned to her family, according to rescuers.

Her grandma, Urgyen Tsemon, has been kept under medical observation for potential life-threatening injuries.

“They were determined to stay alive,” Ao Dingqiang, a 40-year-old rescuer from Guang”an of Sichuan, told the China Daily.

The latest miracle came as rescuers stretched their efforts from Gyegu to reach remote villages in the mountainous plateau terrain.

Both survivors are from Xinzhai village, about 20 km east of Gyegu town and 3 km from the main road.

An eight-man team was involved in the rescue operation.

They used a hydraulic jack to lift the collapsed mud-brick wall and roll it down a slope to make enough room for the trapped villagers to get free. (ANI)

Demolition firm faces asbestos prosecution

A Geraldton demolition company is facing charges of failing to handle asbestos material properly .

Earlier this year, the City of Geraldton Greenough confirmed rubble dumped behind the Geraldton Grammar School contained asbestos.

Yesterday in the Geraldton Magistrates Court, the city began prosecution action against Softail Proprietary Limited.

Lawyers representing the company yesterday requested a 21-day adjournment.

The company is due back in court on May 6.

Tibetans mourn dead as China quake toll hits 760

Tibetans mourned their dead relatives in the stricken Chinese town of Gyegu on Friday, as the death toll from a strong earthquake earlier this week climbed to 760.

Addressing residents of Gyegu in remote and windswept Yushu county high on the Tibetan plateau late on Thursday, Premier Wen Jiabao clambered over rubble and pledged continued rescue efforts.

Survivors of Wednesday’s tremor spent the night huddled under quilts and in tents, while doctors struggled to treat the wounded in a makeshift medical centre.

At a foothill under the main monastery of Gyegu, monks had gathered to chant Tibetan Buddhist mantras in front of piles of dead. Some helped residents look for kin among what appeared to be hundreds of bodies, collected on a covered platform.

“Many of the bodies you see here don’t have families or their families haven’t come looking for them, so it’s our job to take good care of them,” said Lopu, a monk clad in maroon robes.

“I’d say we’ve collected a thousand or more bodies here. Some we found ourselves, some were sent to us.”

Some local Tibetans said they didn’t believe the official death toll estimate of 760, saying many more had died without being officially counted.

Many more bodies had already been removed by family members, Lopu said.

The actual death toll is still unclear, but the damage was mainly around Gyegu, where most of Yushu county’s 100,000 people reside. Estimates by NGOs support a figure of around 1,000 dead.

Some 243 people are still listed as missing, and over 1,000 as “seriously injured”.

In remarks translated into Tibetan to a receptive crowd, Premier Wen pledged that rescuers would not give up hope of finding people still trapped under rubble.

But temperatures well below freezing at night leave little chance of anyone still surviving under collapsed buildings.

Many injured locals spent a cold night in tents or outdoors waiting for medical aid. Harried doctors said they had had almost no sleep over the past two days.

Some pregnant women were transferred 1,000 km (620-km) to the provincial capital, Xining, after at least two babies were born in tents outside Gyegu’s damaged hospital, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

Chinese President Hu Jintao cut short a summit in Brazil, and cancelled a planned trip to Venezuela and Chile in order to return early to China.

Convoys carrying tents, water, food, blankets and medical equipment continued to roll into Yushu county on Friday. Chinese volunteer organisations and state media launched fund-raising and clothing drives.

US team arrives in Peshawar to probe consulate bombing

Peshawar, Apr.7 (ANI): A four-member team from the US has arrived in Peshawar to probe Monday’s terror strike on the American consulate.

The team visited the crime scene to collect ground evidence. The rubble from the adjacent buildings, damaged in the attack, has still not been cleared, The Daily Times reports.

Meanwhile, North West Frontier Province (NWFP) Police chief Malik Naveed has rejected reports of there being any security failure.

“It was a great success that the attackers were not allowed to reach their target,” Naveed said.

The militants had first exploded a car bomb, then opened gun fire and hurled grenades and tried to enter the consulate, but were prevented.

Two Pakistani security officials were killed and many others were njured, but no American was killed or injured. (ANI)

INTERVIEW – Kyrgyz opposition plans interim government

Kyrgyz opposition leader Roza Otunbayeva called on Thursday for President Kurmanbek Bakiyev to resign and said she planned to run an interim government for six months to draft a new constitution for the Central Asian state.

“We have a caretaker government now in place, and I am the head of it,” Otunbayeva told Reuters by telephone.

“It will remain in place for half a year, during which we will draft the constitution and create conditions for free and fair (presidential) elections,” she said.

The opposition in Kyrgyzstan, an impoverished ex-Soviet state of 5.3 million people, says it has forced the government to resign after clashes in the capital Bishkek on Wednesday during which at least 47 people were killed.

Otunbayeva, 59, was an instrumental figure in the revolution that brought Bakiyev to power five years ago. She called these protests a “Tulip Revolution” against corruption, and served as acting foreign minister in the early days of Bakiyev’s rule.

But she later fell out with Bakiyev, becoming one of several revolutionary allies dismissed by the president.

“We want him to resign,” Otunbayeva said. “If he resists our calls, I really don’t know. The entire country is in the hands of an alternative power.”

Otunbayeva, who was the first Kyrgyz ambassador to Britain, said she had no idea of Bakiyev’s whereabouts.

“Has he gone to the south of the country? Has he left the country? We do not know,” she said. “He has preferred not to establish any contact with us.”

As Otunbayeva spoke to Reuters, sporadic gunfire continued through the night in Bishkek. Crowds looted shops and ran through streets strewn with rubble and glass, whistling and waving red national flags.

“The situation remains very tense and we must work very hard now,” she said. “There is a lot of destruction.”

(Additional reporting by Olga Dzyubenko, writing by Robin Paxton)

Quake-hit Haiti expects “massive” donors’ response

Haiti expects a “massive” response from donors to its multibillion-dollar needs for reconstruction following the Jan. 12 earthquake, Finance and Economy Minister Ronald Baudin said on Monday.

He told Reuters the government was hoping to obtain commitments totalling just over $4 billion for a three-year period at a donors’ conference in New York on Wednesday, $1.3 billion of which was to be delivered in the first 18 months.

Baudin said the catastrophic quake caused estimated damages of more than $11 billion to a country that was already the poorest in the Western Hemisphere. Haiti was looking to its foreign partners to help not just replace lost infrastructure, but also modernize and extend it across the nation, he said.

“We will propose to make massive investments in infrastructure outside the capital, Port-au-Prince,” he added.

This was part of a decentralizing strategy to spread development beyond the wrecked capital, which had concentrated national business activity with the result that its devastation by the quake had pulverized the overall Haitian economy.

“We expect that the responses that will come out of New York will be clear, massive and as great as our ambitions,” Baudin said in an interview in Port-au-Prince.

Just removing all of the rubble caused by the earthquake would cost more than $1 billion.

“There are schools, hospitals and government ministry headquarters that have been destroyed, that we need to rebuild,” Baudin said.

But he added: “We won’t limit our actions to repairing the damage in affected areas. In fact, there’s a plan to set up all the infrastructure the country needs and we’ll do it throughout the national territory.”

At a preparatory meeting earlier this month, Haiti’s government and development experts had originally proposed a short-term funding target of $3.8 billion over 18 months with the understanding that donors would provide more longer-term support for rebuilding.

Baudin also expected donors to agree a government request for $350 million in immediate direct budgetary support.

“I believe we will find those $350 million so we can avoid the central bank having to fund the deficit, which will increase the inflation rate and put pressure on the exchange rate,” he said.

France and some Latin American countries, including Ecuador, had made commitments for budgetary support, he added.

GROWTH REBOUND SEEN IN 2011

Baudin said government revenue collection, which had plummeted after the quake, improved in March to a level of 57 percent of forecast revenue, against 37 percent in February.

“Despite the difficulties, we have managed to pay government employees. But we badly need the budget support to be able to continue to deliver basic services,” he said.

To ensure that all the outside financing for Haiti’s reconstruction was properly accounted for, all of it would be channeled through a Trust Fund created for the purpose.

This would avoid situations which had occurred in the past in which some NGOs had received funds to operate in the country without accountability, Baudin said.

He also said that as a result of the damage inflicted on Haiti’s already weak economy by the earthquake, gross domestic product this year was expected to contract by 8.5 percent.

U.S. Treasury officials had previously estimated this contraction in Haiti could be as high as 10 percent.

This compared to economic growth of 2.8 percent to 2.9 percent last year, despite hurricane damage and flooding in 2008.

Baudin said with the expected huge influx of donor financing, economic growth was likely to rebound to close to 10 percent next year.

“We’ll try to sustain that growth to make sure it never goes below 6 percent. If we can keep such a rhythm for ten years, I think we’ll be in a much better situation than we were before,” the minister added.

Access to credit was currently a major problem for Haitian companies, because in many cases the assets they had previously used to act as collateral for loans — buildings and equipment — had been destroyed in the quake.

Baudin said there was a plan to set up a sort of loan guarantee fund for the banking sector to support its ability to make loans and keep credit flowing into the reconstruction.

Death toll rises to 36 in Kolkata”s Park Street fire

Kolkata, Mar 29 (ANI): The death toll from the fire that swept through the floors of the multi-storied Stephen Court building in Park Street on March 23 has gone up to 36, following the recovery of one more body on Monday from the fifth floor of the building.

Kolkata Municipal Corporation official said: “We are working very carefully to remove the derbris, so a lot of time is being taken,” adding that nearly 75 percent of the work of removing the rubble is finished and the rest will be done tonight.

West Bengal Fire and Emergency Services Minister Pratim Chatterjee had on March 28 said the Stephen Court fire has recorded the highest ever death toll in any fire incident in the metropolis even as search for the missing is still on.

“In my 14-year stint as minister, this is the worst fire tragedy,” he added as 34 deaths were reported on Sunday.

Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee had on March 23 slammed the disaster management of the West Bengal Government for failing to control the fire and directed a railway emergency team from Sealdah to assist people trapped inside the building.

“I spoke to the Defence Ministry for sending the army. The ministry has issued instructions to send the army,” Banerjee told the media at the scene of fire on Tuesday, adding that the West Bengal Government should have sought the help of the army.

Banerjee said she did not want to make a political point, and had deliberately delayed her arrival at the site so that no one would accuse her of hampering rescue efforts.

“I was keeping an eye on matters and we waited for one-and-a half hours before coming here,” she said.

West Bengal Fire and Emergency Services Minister Pratim Chatterjee had then blamed the excessive traffic for the delay in rescue efforts, adding that the death toll could rise. (ANI)

Weaving eyes Captain America villain role

Australian actor Hugo Weaving is in talks to join the Captain America movie as the villainous Red Skull.

The Marvel Studios project remains in search of the actor to play Steve Rogers, Captain America’s alter ego.

The movie will be directed by Joe Johnston, who recently worked with Weaving in The Wolfman.

In the Marvel comics, Red Skull has been Captain America’s archenemy since 1941, when he engaged in espionage and sabotage as Hitler’s right-hand man.

In his final battle with the superhero, Red Skull was buried under the rubble of a bombed building but – as would occur later with Captain America – fell into a state of suspended animation. Both were revived in modern times.

Red Skull was the villain in the low-budget 1990 Captain America movie.

Weaving played bad guy Agent Smith in the Matrix franchise.

He is also known to genre fans as elf ruler Elrond of the Lord Of The Rings trilogy.

- Reuters

Lahore car bomb blast kills 11, injures 45

Lahore, Mar 8(ANI): A car bomb explosion killed at least 11 people and injured 45 others in Lahore on Monday.

According to reports, a suicide bomber rammed an explosive-laden truck into the main gate of the Federal Investigation Agency”s (FIA) office here.

Witnesses said the FIA building has completely collapsed and a number of people are still buried under the rubble, The Dawn reports.

TV reports said some of the neighbouring buildings had also been damaged in the explosion.

A number of schools and religious institutions are located in the neighbourhood known as Model Town.

A number of prominent politicians, including the former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif live in Model Town.

There was no immediately claim of responsibility for the blast, which came after a lull of several months in attacks on military and security targets in Pakistan’s main cities by Al-Qaeda militants and their affiliates in the Pakistani Taliban.

Meanwhile, security levels have been raised to high alert across the city. (ANI)

Blast rocks Lahore, several casualties feared

LAHORE, PAKISTAN: A car bomb slammed into Pakistani offices used to interrogate suspected militants on Monday, destroying the building and killing 11 people in the latest attack to strike Lahore.

More than 60 were wounded with people trapped under rubble of collapsed buildings when a car packed with up to 600 kilograms (1,300 pounds) of explosives struck an investigations unit in Pakistan’s second largest city.

There were scenes of panic as volunteers and rescue workers dug with bare hands under the collapsed two-storey building and a severely damaged Muslim seminary, searching for survivors and fearing the death toll could rise.

Pakistan pointed the finger at Taliban-linked militants out to destabilise the nuclear-armed country of 167 million and a wave of similar attacks has killed more than 130 people in the cosmopolitan city over the last year.

More than 3,000 people have been killed in suicide and bomb attacks across Pakistan since July 2007, a campaign blamed on Islamist militants opposed to the government’s alliance with the United States in the war on al-Qaida.

“It was around 8:15 (0315 GMT) when I heard a deafening blast which shook my house,” said Nasim-ur-Rehman who lives about 1.5 kilometres (one mile) from the scene of attack in the upmarket neighbourhood Model Town.

“When I rushed out I saw thick smoke billowing out,” he added.

The blast gouged a huge crater out of the ground, crumpled roofs and littered the streets with tree branches. Bulldozers and other heavy-lifting machinery worked to clear away the mounds of rubble, witnesses said.

Flying glass wounded passers-by. A woman and her daughter were among the dead in the city of eight million, and civilians who were wounded were mostly office workers or parents returning after dropping their children at school.

“It was a police special investigation unit that was targeted. A vehicle packed with explosives hit the building. The building was used to interrogate suspected terrorists,” Lahore city police chief Pervez Rathore told AFP.
Khusro Pervez, the top administration official in Lahore, said 11 people were killed and 60 wounded.

“I fear the death toll may rise. We believe there are still people trapped under the rubble,” he said.
Police said 30 to 50 people were in the building, used by police and intelligence agents, at the time of attack, which blew out a crater three metres (10 feet) deep and four to six metres wide.

“The blast also severely damaged a nearby religious school and houses. All schools have been closed in the area in order to avoid further losses or to prevent the possibility of another attack,” said Rathore.

Interior minister Rehman Malik blamed “hired killers who want to destabilise Pakistan” and pointed the finger at the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) faction holed up in the northwest of the country along the border with Afghanistan.

“In almost every blast there has been TTP involvement and they themselves have also claimed responsibility for attacks,” he added.

“The ammunition and weapons are coming from Afghanistan,” he alleged.

Ambulances raced to the area and the city’s Jinnah Hospital declared a state of emergency as casualties were rushed into wards and rescue workers used seismic sensors to search for survivors under the rubble.

Monday’s bombing in Lahore follows a recent decline in Islamist militant attacks in Pakistan after a significant hike in bloodshed in late 2009.

Pakistani officials had linked the reduction to the suspected death — still not confirmed — of TTP leader Hakimullah Mehsud and military offensives that have disrupted militant networks.

The military claims to have made big gains against Taliban and Al-Qaeda strongholds over the past year, launching major offensives in the northwestern district of Swat and the tribal region of South Waziristan.

Washington says militants use Pakistan’s semi-autonomous tribal belt to plot and stage attacks in Afghanistan, where more than 120,000 NATO and US troops are helping Afghan forces battle the Taliban militia.

US army set for “hopping rotochut” that hops to avoid rubble trouble

London, September 19 (ANI): The U.S. army’s fleet of robots will soon be enhanced with the addition of forthcoming reconnaissance craft called the ‘hopping rotochute’, which will be capable of travelling deep into obstacle-ridden spaces like caves and rubble-laden buildings to video what it finds.

The self-righting probe is being developed for the Army Research Lab in Aberdeen, Maryland, by Eric Beyer and Mark Costello, a pair of robotics engineers at Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta.

The project attains significance because present-day military robots, which run on small tank-style tracks, cannot cope with irregular surfaces and obstacles such as rubble or boulders.

“They usually have trouble and get stuck with even low obstacles and walls a couple of feet high,” says Costello.

Although small helicopters are one alternative, continuous flying drains the batteries fast.

Thus, Costello stresses the need for a rotor-powered, bottom-heavy, self-righting vehicle that spends most of its time on the ground, conserving battery power.

AS to whether repeated hopping might harm the craft, a spokesman for the Impact Centre at Cranfield University in Bedfordshire, UK, said: “From a crashworthiness point of view this concept looks perfectly feasible. There should be no problem with the vehicle surviving hundreds of impacts, which is roughly equivalent to dropping a mobile phone from waist height.” (ANI)

Seven to eight persons rescued in building collapse incident: BMC(Lead: Mumbai building)

Mumbai, Aug.25 (ANI): At least seven to eight persons were rescued out of 100-year-old residential building whose front portion collapsed at 6.45 p.m here on Lamington Road of the central Mumbai on Tuesday, said senior official of the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation.

“Seven to eight person trapped under the rubble of collapsed 100-year-old building have been saved. They have been rushed to the hospital. There are no reports of any death so far,” said Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation’s Commissioner Jairaj Phatak while addressing the media persons.

“The rubble of the collapsed portion of the building will be cleared within two hours,” Phatak said at 8.00 o’ clock.

At least 10 people were feared to be trapped under the rubble of the central Mumbai’s five-storey Khatau Mansion building whose front part collapsed here on Tuesday evening.

About 10 fire tenders were rushed to spot for rescue operation along with the police personnel after the incident. (ANI)

Three persons rescued in the building collapse incident of central Mumbai

Mumbai, Aug.25 (ANI): At least three of the 10 people trapped under the rubble of the central Mumbai’s five-storey building that collapsed here on Tuesday evening have been brought out during the rescue operation being carried out by police and fire brigade personnel.

Some construction work was on at the time of the tragic incident, which occurred at the Lamington Road here, an IBN 7 report stated.

According to initial reports, the front portion of the Khatau Mansion Building, located on Lamington Road of the central Mumbai, caved in.

About a dozen fire tenders have been rushed to the place of incident for facilitating rescue operations. (ANI)

12 killed in pre-dawn drone attack in Miranshah

Islamabad, Aug.21 (ANI): At least twelve people were killed in a suspected US drone strike in the Danday Darpa Khel area of Miranshah early morning today (Friday).

According to sources, US drones fired several missiles targeting a house in the region killing all the 12 people on the spot besides wounding many others.

Eyewitnesses said casualties may rise as more people are feared trapped inside the rubble.

Sources said that all victims belonged to Afghanistan.

Immediately after the strike there were reports of extremists carrying out synchronized attacks in the region in retaliation of the drone hit.

Militants attacked three check-posts situated near the Miranshah air force base, The News reported.

Officials have imposed an indefinite curfew in Miranshah and adjacent areas after the incident. (ANI)