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.

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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)

Rescue job in full swing, IAF pitches in with choppers

Jhargram, May 29 — Helicopters of the BSF and Air Force have been pressed into operation to rescue the survivors in Friday’s train tragedy in Jhargram. The injured are being flown to nearby hospitals in Kharagpur.

West Bengal Finance Minister Asim Dasgupta, who visited the accident site with a 22-member police team adept at splitting mangled bogies, said the next of kin of the deceased will get Rs 3 lakh each if the attack was proved to be a Maoist one. “The injured will get free treatment,” he said.

Survivors were being taken out of the mangled bogies till late Friday afternoon.

100 missing after motorboat sinks in Amazon river

Lima, May 26 — At least 100 people went missing on Wednesday in Peru after the motorboat they were travelling in sank in the Amazon river, Peruvian radio station RPP reported. According to RPP, some 80 survivors had been rescued, and two bodies had also been recovered.

The motorboat Camila, which had a capacity for 160 passengers and according to survivors was carrying at least 200 at the time of the accident, sank as it travelled through the village of Santa Rosa, near the Colombian border. It reportedly had a hole in its hull.

The accident happened around 2 am, when most of the passengers were asleep. The authorities took a long time to reach this remote area, and preliminary rescue efforts were carried out by locals

15 killed in Turkish bus crash

Moscow, May 26 (IANS/RIA Novosti) At least 15 people, including 13 Russians, were killed and 26 injured when a tourist bus fell into a river in Turkey, officials said Tuesday.

The incident occurred Tuesday, when the bus, en route from Alanya to Pamukkale town, veered off the road and fell into the Aksu River in southwestern Turkish region of Antalya, Russian emergency situations ministry spokeswoman Yelena Chernova said.

Chernova said 13 Russians and two Turks, who were also on the bus, have died and 26 have been hospitalised.

The Russian health ministry said six of the injured were in a critical condition.

According to preliminary information, the accident took place after the driver suffered a heart attack.

Meanwhile, Russia said it will send a team of doctors from the Disaster Medicine Centre to Turkey to help the survivors.

Pilot failed to signal SOS, being blamed for Mangalore air crash

Mangalore, May 22 (ANI): The pilot of the Air India Express flight from Dubai to Mangalore failed to signal or announce an emergency landing, and this is being cited as a factor leading to Saturday”s crash near Mangalore Airport.

At least 169 people are feared dead after an Air India Express aircraft from Dubai to Mangalore overshot the runway while landing at the Mangalore airport on Saturday morning.

A total of 173 people including the crew members were on board the flight that crashed around 6: 30 a.m.

At least 20 fire tenders have been rushed to the site as the plane is on fire and smoke was seen coming out of the airport.

The rescue operation is still on with the help of around 150 Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) personnel.

It has been reported that there are six survivors, who have been rushed to the hospital.

Karnataka Home Minister Dr V S Acharya said incident happened near a valley 10 kilometers from the airport.

Meanwhile, the Mangalore airport has been shut for the time being.

There are reports that Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel has rushed to Mangalore to monitor the situation. (ANI)

Over 169 dead in Mangalore air crash

Mangalore, May 22 (ANI): At least 169 people are feared dead after an Air India Express aircraft from Dubai to Mangalore overshot the runway while landing at the Mangalore airport on Saturday morning.

A total of 173 people, including the crew members were on board the flight that crashed around 6: 30 a.m.

At least 20 fire tenders have been rushed to the site as the plane is on fire and smoke was seen coming out of the airport.

The rescue operation is still on with the help of around 150 Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) personnel.

It has been reported that there are six survivors, who have been rushed to the hospital.

Karnataka Home Minister Dr V S Acharya said incident happened near a valley 10 kilometers from the airport.

Meanwhile, the Mangalore airport has been shut for the time being.

There are reports that Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel has rushed to Mangalore to monitor the situation. (ANI)

Crashed passenger plane found in Afghanistan

Kabul, May 20 (DPA) The wreckage of a commercial airliner that disappeared in Afghanistan with 43 people on board has been located by NATO forces, an official said Thursday.

Search aircraft found and photographed the wreckage in the mountainous region 40 km north of Kabul, said Nangiallay Qalatwal, spokesman for the Afghan Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation.

Rescue teams were being sent to the site to recover the remains, he said.

The plane, operated by the private company Pamir, was flying Monday from the northern city of Kunduz to the capital when it lost contact with air traffic controllers.

It was not clear whether there were any survivors among the 38 passengers and five crew members.

Commendations for Navy personnel who rescued asylum-seekers

Navy personnel who helped rescue asylum-seekers after a boat explosion near Ashmore Reef last year have received commendations for their efforts.

Two Navy boats were accompanying a boat carrying 47 asylum-seekers to Christmas Island last year when the incident happened.

Five people were killed.

Able Seaman Quinton Boorman was involved in the mass rescue of survivors.

“We just went around and collected basically whoever we could out of the water,” he said.

Commander of Border Protection Rear Admiral Tim Barrett presented Able Seaman Boorman and 13 other Cairns-based Navy personnel with commendations.

“I think the efforts of the crew saved a lot more people who could’ve lost their lives,” he said.

Lieutenant Commander Brett Westcott coordinated the rescue effort.

He was presented with a special commendation from the Defence Force chief.

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)

Dolphin survivors still on the radar

Tasmania’s wildlife authorities say they are not sure how many dolphins remain in a north-west river, after mass deaths on the weekend.

More than 30 bottle-nose dolphins from a pod of 50 died after beaching themselves on the banks of the Pieman River on Sunday.

Widlife officers returned 12 survivors to the water overnight and four of the mammals swam out to sea.

Another was found dead this morning.

Tests on the dolphin carcasses today have ruled out toxins as the cause of death.

The Parks and Wildlife Service says the dolphins still swimming in the river appear healthy.

They will be monitored again tomorrow.

Indian, Pakistani survivors of forced marriages to pitch for abandoning practice

London, Apr. 7 (ANI): In the first scheme of its kind in Britain, survivors of forced marriages, mostly Indians and Pakistanis, will travel the country next month to describe the ordeals they went through in an attempt to try to persuade communities to abandon the practice.

According to Fox News, men and women who were forced to marry against their wishes, will journey to 12 cities to tell teachers and police officers to be extra vigilant about children going missing during the summer holidays.

Each summer, hundreds of girls and boys, largely from South Asian communities, travel with their families to India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, where they are forced into marriages.

Those working to stop the practice say the period just before the summer holiday is always their busiest time of the year. They hope that prompting survivors to tell their own stories will ncourage children at risk to come forward and local authorities to take those fears seriously when they do. (ANI)

Over 100 believed alive after week in flooded China mine

XIANGNING, China, April 5 (Reuters) – More than 100 miners are expected to emerge alive from a flooded coal mine in north China after more than seven days trapped in pitch dark, rescue and government officials said on Monday.

China has the world’s deadliest coal-mining industry, with more than 2,600 people killed in mine floods, explosions, collapses and other accidents in 2009 alone.

Some 108 survivors were pulled out last Sunday when water surged into the pit that was under construction in Shanxi province. (Reporting by Jacqueline Wong; Editing by Nick Macfie)

US admits to killing Afghan women in February

Kabul (Afghanistan), Apr.5 (ANI): The American-led military command in Kabul admitted late on Sunday that its forces had, in fact, killed three Afghan women during a night time raid in February this year.

The New York Times quoted a NATO official as also saying Sunday in an interview that an Afghan-led team of investigators had found signs of evidence tampering at the scene, including the removal of bullets from walls near where the women were killed.

The disclosure could not come at a worse moment for the American military, as NATO officials are struggling to contain fallout from a series of tirades against the foreign military presence by the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, who has also railed against the killing of civilians by Western forces.

Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the American and NATO commander in Afghanistan, has tried hard, and with some success, to reduce civilian casualties through new rules that include restricting night raids and also bringing Special Operations forces under tighter control.

But botched Special Operations attacks – which are blamed for a large proportion of the civilian deaths caused by NATO forces – continue to infuriate Afghans and create support for the Taliban.

NATO military officials had already admitted killing two innocent civilians – a district prosecutor and a local police chief – during the raid, on a home near Gardez in southeastern Afghanistan.

The two men were shot to death when they came out of their home, armed with Kalashnikov rifles, to investigate.

Three women also died that night at the same home: One was a pregnant mother of 10 and another was a pregnant mother of six.

NATO military officials had suggested that the women were actually stabbed to death – or had died by some other means – hours before the raid, an explanation that implied that family members or others at the home might have killed them.

Survivors of the raid called that explanation a cover-up and insisted that American forces killed the women.

Relatives and family friends said the bloody raid followed a party in honor of the birth of a grandson of the owner of the house. (ANI)

US admits to killing Afghan women

The American-led military command in Kabul admitted late on Sunday that its forces had, in fact, killed three Afghan women during a night time raid in February this year.

The ‘New York Times’ quoted a NATO official as also saying Sunday in an interview that an Afghan-led team of investigators had found signs of evidence tampering at the scene, including the removal of bullets from walls near where the women were killed.

The disclosure could not come at a worse moment for the American military, as NATO officials are struggling to contain fallout from a series of tirades against the foreign military presence by the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, who has also railed against the killing of civilians by Western forces.

Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the American and NATO commander in Afghanistan, has tried hard, and with some success, to reduce civilian casualties through new rules that include restricting night raids and also bringing Special Operations forces under tighter control.

But botched Special Operations attacks which are blamed for a large proportion of the civilian deaths caused by NATO forces continue to infuriate Afghans and create support for the Taliban.

NATO military officials had already admitted killing two innocent civilians – a district prosecutor and a local police chief during the raid, on a home near Gardez in southeastern Afghanistan.

The two men were shot to death when they came out of their home, armed with Kalashnikov rifles, to investigate. Three women also died that night at the same home: One was a pregnant mother of 10 and another was a pregnant mother of six.

NATO military officials had suggested that the women were actually stabbed to death or had died by some other means hours before the raid, an explanation that implied that family members or others at the home might have killed them.

Survivors of the raid called that explanation a cover-up and insisted that American forces killed the women. Relatives and family friends said the bloody raid followed a party in honor of the birth of a grandson of the owner of the house.

At least 114 rescued from flooded China mine

Chinese rescuers have pulled 114 miners from a flooded coal mine in northern Shanxi province more than a week since the accident occurred, dozens of them rescued on Monday.

“It is a miracle in China’s mining rescue history,” Luo Lin, head of the State Administration of Work Safety waiting at the pit entrance, was quoted as saying by Xinhua news agency.

Rescuers were continuing the search for 39 trapped miners, the agency said.

Shanxi Communitst Party chief Zhang Baoshun was quoted as saying most of the survivors were believed to be in stable condition.

(Reporting by Jacqueline Wong; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Nine alive after week in flooded China mine

(Reuters) – Nine miners trapped in a flooded coal mine in northern China were rescued early on Monday after more than seven days underground, with signs that over 140 others may also still be alive in the shaft.

World | China

Officials have said 153 miners were trapped in the unfinished Wangjialing mine in Xiangning, Shanxi province, after it filled with water from an adjacent underground source over a week ago — one of the worst mine accidents for some time in a nation with notoriously dangerous coal mines.

Some locals believe even more miners were trapped.

The government mobilized 3,000 rescue workers to pump out water and search for trapped miners, but hopes of anyone emerging alive appeared to be dimming until rescuers heard knocking on a mine pipe on Friday.

After frantic pumping, the water level dropped low enough for rescue workers to enter the shaft, who then pulled out the nine, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

“Their blood pressure and heart rates remained normal after having being trapped in the shaft for one week,” Xinhua reported of the survivors.

The rescued survivors were weak but lucid and able to speak despite the ordeal, identifying themselves to doctors, the semi-official China News Service reported.

“Their widespread problem is that after a long time soaking in water, they have partially ulcerated (skin),” the report said.

The Xinhua report said 144 miners were still trapped and “rescue workers heard banging on a metal pipe, indicating further signs of life.”

Another 300 rescuers had gone into the shaft, hoping to find survivors, Chinese television news said. An official helping oversee rescue efforts said it may be Monday afternoon before searchers reach the tunnels where there could be more survivors.

Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang, the senior official in charge of work safety, told the rescuers “to race against time and go all out to continue the rescue work,” the report said.

But many of those 144 appear likely to join China’s toll of thousands of miners killed every year by explosions, shaft collapses, flooding and toxic gas.

Strong demand for energy and lax safety standards have made China’s mines the most dangerous in the world, despite the government’s drive to clamp down on small, unsafe operations where most accidents occur.

The number of people killed in Chinese coal mines dropped to 2,631 in 2009, an average of seven a day, from 3,215 in 2008, according to official statistics.

China has ordered the consolidation or takeover of many private mines. It says the shutdown of many of the most dangerous private operations has helped cut accidents.

But the deadliest accidents are not limited to private firms. The Wangjialing mine was a project belonging to a joint venture between China National Coal Group and Shanxi Coking Coal Group, two of China’s larger state-owned firms.

Relatives of miners and some Chinese media have blamed the firms for ignoring safety requirements in their push to start operations.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Benjamin Kang Lim)

Chinese mine flood relatives fear toll cover-up

(Reuters) – Families and survivors of a flood feared to be one of China’s worst mine accidents in recent years say officials are covering up the true number of people trapped underground and failing in rescue efforts.

World | China

The local government has not published the names of the 153 miners it says were unable to escape when water surged into the pit on Sunday afternoon, prompting Vice-Premier Zhang Dejiang to demand a list of potential victims, local media reported.

“Is 153 the exact number?” Zhang, sent to direct rescue efforts shortly after the accident, was quoted asking mine officials in a conference call.

“I don’t think the suspicion from the public is unreasonable,” he added, according to the Beijing News.

At the mine itself relatives waiting for news of their fathers, sons and brothers, and survivors keen to help out with rescue efforts all told Reuters the official toll was too low.

“We sent 10 tramcars down to the pit before the flooding and each car usually carries 44 miners and a driver,” a tramcar driver who was working on the day of the accident said.

“Only one car came back up the shaft, plus a few dozen miners who escaped on foot,” he said, suggesting nearly 450 people could have been underground at the time of the flood.

Officials say 261 people were working in the unfinished Wangjialing mine, in northern Shanxi province, and 108 escaped. Even those who do not question the total number underground say

there may be more than 153 still trapped.

“At least 200 people are trapped,” said a mine worker surnamed Li, unwilling to give his full name because of official pressure not to speak to foreign media.

“I was working in the checkpoint at the entry of the pit, so I’m quite sure about how many people had gone underground.”

A Shanxi government official said they had heard there were a lot of suspicions, but insisted the number was accurate.

“We have checked this many times, so it should be the exact number,” said the official from the province’s foreign affairs office, who gave only his surname, Cao, and said he did not know why names were not being released.

SURVIVAL HOPES?

Some miners were working on platforms above current water levels and may have survived, the official Xinhua agency said.

Sounds from the pit, which may have been someone pounding on the pipelines, were heard on Friday morning, CCTV news reported. One of the rescue workers told Reuters they had found a piece of wire tied onto a pipeline sent into the flooded zone.

But five days of rescue efforts have reduced water levels barely a meter, the Xinhua report added.

“The pipelines are too thin to pump water fast enough,” the daughter of a trapped miner told Reuters, requesting anonymity.

“My father will not be killed by the flooding, but by these rescuers,” she added.

China has ordered the consolidation or takeover of many private mines in order to improve oversight and safety.

It credits the shutdown of many of the most dangerous private mines with helping to reduce the death toll in the coal industry to about 2,600 last year from over 3,000 the year before.

But the deadliest accidents are not limited to private firms. The Wangjialing mine was a high-profile project belonging to a joint venture between China National Coal Group and Shanxi Coking Coal Group, two of China’s larger state-owned firms.

Relatives and some Chinese media have blamed the firms for ignoring safety requirements in their push to start operations.

Miners found water in the pit as early as three days before the accident, but the managers just said: “How can you be afraid of a little bit of water?” the worker surnamed Li said.

“They did not treat migrant workers as human beings,” he added.

(Writing by Yu Le and Emma Graham-Harrison; Editing by Benjamin Kang Lim and Jerry Norton)

Chinese mine flood relatives fear toll cover-up

* Officials refuse to publish list of names of trapped

* Survivors say fewer than 108 escaped, more trapped

* Possible indications of life heard on Friday morning

XIANGNING, China, April 2 (Reuters) – Families and survivors of a flood feared to be one of China’s worst mine accidents in recent years say officials are covering up the true number of people trapped underground and failing in rescue efforts.

The local government has not published the names of the 153 miners it says were unable to escape when water surged into the pit on Sunday afternoon, prompting Vice-Premier Zhang Dejiang to demand a list of potential victims, local media reported.

“Is 153 the exact number?” Zhang, sent to direct rescue efforts shortly after the accident, was quoted asking mine officials in a conference call.

“I don’t think the suspicion from the public is unreasonable,” he added, according to the Beijing News.

At the mine itself relatives waiting for news of their fathers, sons and brothers, and survivors keen to help out with rescue efforts all told Reuters the official toll was too low.

“We sent 10 tramcars down to the pit before the flooding and each car usually carries 44 miners and a driver,” a tramcar driver who was working on the day of the accident said.

“Only one car came back up the shaft, plus a few dozen miners who escaped on foot,” he said, suggesting nearly 450 people could have been underground at the time of the flood.

Officials say 261 people were working in the unfinished Wangjialing mine, in northern Shanxi province, and 108 escaped. Even those who do not question the total number underground say there may be more than 153 still trapped.

“At least 200 people are trapped,” said a mine worker surnamed Li, unwilling to give his full name because of official pressure not to speak to foreign media.

“I was working in the checkpoint at the entry of the pit, so I’m quite sure about how many people had gone underground.”

A Shanxi government official said they had heard there were a lot of suspicions, but insisted the number was accurate.

“We have checked this many times, so it should be the exact number,” said the official from the province’s foreign affairs office, who gave only his surname, Cao, and said he did not know why names were not being released.

SURVIVAL HOPES?

Some miners were working on platforms above current water levels and may have survived, the official Xinhua agency said.

Sounds from the pit, which may have been someone pounding on the pipelines, were heard on Friday morning, CCTV news reported. One of the rescue workers told Reuters they had found a piece of wire tied onto a pipeline sent into the flooded zone.

But five days of rescue efforts have reduced water levels barely a metre, the Xinhua report added.

“The pipelines are too thin to pump water fast enough,” the daughter of a trapped miner told Reuters, requesting anonymity.

“My father will not be killed by the flooding, but by these rescuers,” she added.

China has ordered the consolidation or takeover of many private mines in order to improve oversight and safety.

It credits the shutdown of many of the most dangerous private mines with helping to reduce the death toll in the coal industry to about 2,600 last year from over 3,000 the year before.

But the deadliest accidents are not limited to private firms. The Wangjialing mine was a high-profile project belonging to a joint venture between China National Coal Group and Shanxi Coking Coal Group, two of China’s larger state-owned firms.

Relatives and some Chinese media have blamed the firms for ignoring safety requirements in their push to start operations.

Miners found water in the pit as early as three days before the accident, but the managers just said: “How can you be afraid of a little bit of water?” the worker surnamed Li said.

“They did not treat migrant workers as human beings,” he added. (Writing by Yu Le and Emma Graham-Harrison; Editing by Benjamin Kang Lim and Jerry Norton)

Nigerian village on alert after bloody attack

Security forces in Nigeria are again on high alert following an attack on a village near the city of Jos, which killed at least 13 people.

Hundreds of people have been killed in sectarian violence in the area in the past few months.

A dusk-to-dawn curfew has been enforced by the Nigerian military around the city of Jos since January, but still people are being brutally murdered.

In the latest violence, witnesses say Muslim herders disguised as soldiers attacked a predominantly Christian village killing more than a dozen people, mostly women and children.

The attackers struck at night and reportedly used machetes to butcher their victims before burning homes.

Survivors say some of their relatives are still missing.

The killings are believed to be related to a feud between the nomadic Muslim group Fulani and the Berom, who are Christian farmers.