There is no hope of finding survivors from the three high-rise
buildings that collapsed in central Rio, authorities said Friday, which
could bring the final death toll to 26.
Two days after the office buildings -- of 20, 10, and four stories -- crashed down near the municipal theater on the city's Cinelandia square, officials said 11 bodies had been recovered, including seven on Friday.
"Regrettably I must say that we no longer expect to find survivors," Sergio Simoes, the state secretary for Civil Defense, said Friday, noting that all the bodies extricated from the rubble so far "were badly crushed."
Twelve of the 22 missing were believed to be in a classroom on the sixth floor of the 20-story Liberdade building where a computer firm was giving a training course when the structure collapsed.
"We expect to find a significant number of people there," Simoes said.
Late Thursday, Rio de Janeiro Mayor Eduardo Paes put the official toll at four dead, with 22 missing.
A dense cloud of smoke still hung over the rubble from a fire that was still burning, beyond the reach of firefighters.
The search was expected to end sometime between Friday night and Saturday morning "to minimize the suffering of families," of the victims, said Colonel Ronaldo Alcantara of the city's fire department.
Some 390 people are taking part in the rescue effort, including a contingent that was sent to Haiti during the devastating earthquake there two years ago.
The disaster could have been far more deadly if it had happened during the day, and it raised fresh questions about Brazil's preparations to host the 2014 Football World Cup and 2016 Summer Olympic Games.
The three buildings collapsed almost simultaneously for as yet unknown reasons, though authorities said they did not believe an explosion had occurred, as witnesses initially reported.
Investigators were focusing on a structural problem as the likely cause. Witnesses reported that remodeling work had been taking place on two floors of one of the buildings.
The work had not been cleared with the Rio Engineering Regional Council (CREA) and was therefore illegal, according to CREA official Luis Antonio Consenza. Police and the CREA have launched an investigation.
Brazil has had several calamities in recent months, including explosions caused by gas leaks, and fatal accidents in poorly maintained amusement parks or in packed streetcars with faulty brakes.
City authorities are scrambling to upgrade the country's infrastructure and to build or renovate 12 stadiums around the country in time for the World Cup, one of the world's premier sporting events.
Last month football's ruling body FIFA warned Brazil about delays in the progress of construction projects expected to be ready for the four-yearly extravaganza.
The Getulio Vargas Foundation and consultancy Ernst & Young have said the country needs more than $11 billion in investment to fix roads, boost hotel capacity, reinforce security and develop its telecom network ahead of the Cup.
Two days after the office buildings -- of 20, 10, and four stories -- crashed down near the municipal theater on the city's Cinelandia square, officials said 11 bodies had been recovered, including seven on Friday.
"Regrettably I must say that we no longer expect to find survivors," Sergio Simoes, the state secretary for Civil Defense, said Friday, noting that all the bodies extricated from the rubble so far "were badly crushed."
Twelve of the 22 missing were believed to be in a classroom on the sixth floor of the 20-story Liberdade building where a computer firm was giving a training course when the structure collapsed.
"We expect to find a significant number of people there," Simoes said.
Late Thursday, Rio de Janeiro Mayor Eduardo Paes put the official toll at four dead, with 22 missing.
A dense cloud of smoke still hung over the rubble from a fire that was still burning, beyond the reach of firefighters.
The search was expected to end sometime between Friday night and Saturday morning "to minimize the suffering of families," of the victims, said Colonel Ronaldo Alcantara of the city's fire department.
Some 390 people are taking part in the rescue effort, including a contingent that was sent to Haiti during the devastating earthquake there two years ago.
The disaster could have been far more deadly if it had happened during the day, and it raised fresh questions about Brazil's preparations to host the 2014 Football World Cup and 2016 Summer Olympic Games.
The three buildings collapsed almost simultaneously for as yet unknown reasons, though authorities said they did not believe an explosion had occurred, as witnesses initially reported.
Investigators were focusing on a structural problem as the likely cause. Witnesses reported that remodeling work had been taking place on two floors of one of the buildings.
The work had not been cleared with the Rio Engineering Regional Council (CREA) and was therefore illegal, according to CREA official Luis Antonio Consenza. Police and the CREA have launched an investigation.
Brazil has had several calamities in recent months, including explosions caused by gas leaks, and fatal accidents in poorly maintained amusement parks or in packed streetcars with faulty brakes.
City authorities are scrambling to upgrade the country's infrastructure and to build or renovate 12 stadiums around the country in time for the World Cup, one of the world's premier sporting events.
Last month football's ruling body FIFA warned Brazil about delays in the progress of construction projects expected to be ready for the four-yearly extravaganza.
The Getulio Vargas Foundation and consultancy Ernst & Young have said the country needs more than $11 billion in investment to fix roads, boost hotel capacity, reinforce security and develop its telecom network ahead of the Cup.
No comments:
Post a Comment