Rescuers hunt for survivors as factory toll hits 19

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Rescuers on Tuesday pulled more survivors and bodies from the rubble of a factory that collapsed in Lahore, as the death toll rose to 19 after the disaster.
The three-storey building used to manufacture veterinary medicines came crashing down after a probable boiler and a gas cylinder explosion at the premises in the congested Multan Road area on Monday, police said.
There was jubilation more than 30 hours after the accident when an elderly woman aged about 60 was pulled out alive from the rubble. Rescue workers said they were also clearing a route to recover two boys also spotted alive.
Emergency teams spent night and day digging through the debris with their bare hands, increasingly desperate as cries for help started to recede from mostly women and children trapped beneath concrete slabs.
Workers and volunteers used everything they could — hammers, axes, chisels and shovels — to shift the rubble and pull out the injured, coated in dust.
“We hope to clear most of the rubble by tonight,” local rescue chief Rizwan Naseer told reporters, saying that workers were digging tunnels under the rubble to pull out more injured people and dead bodies.
“It is a very slow and difficult operation,” Naseer added, saying it took almost five hours to pull out two women alive overnight.
Police official Shoaib Khurram told AFP that 19 people had been killed. Among the dead were at least 11 women, three young girls and three boys.
The toll is thought likely to rise further with dozens still believed to be trapped under the concrete mass.
Police said the factory was illegal. Local residents said it had been shut down twice since 2008, but that the owners reopened the premises each time.
“The owners violated the court orders and broke the seals,” said top local administration official Ahad Cheema.
Most of those trapped under the rubble were believed to be women and children hired to package the medicines at Orient Labs (Private) Limited.
The factory spotlighted poor safety procedures among Pakistani manufacturers and the use of child labour.
The state-run Jinnah Hospital said it had received 31 injured people, seven of them still in the surgical ward which was smelly and crowded.
Welder Mohammad Amin, who suffered minor facial injuries, said he had just arrived at the factory on Monday morning then the explosion happened.
“The whole building shook with a huge noise and everything tumbled down as if a massive earthquake has struck,” he told AFP.
“The roof fell in. There was an iron table nearby and I survived with its support,” the 40 year old said. “I remained there and kept shouting for help, and eventually the rescue workers pulled me out three hours later.”
Saba Shafiq, sister of 12-year-old Mohammad Anis whose right arm was in a plaster cast, said poverty forced the family to send him out to work.
“We are poor people. My father is old and and sick. Our economic condition is bad, we found this factory in our neighbourhood,” she said.
“They paid him around 7,000 rupees which is not bad for a poor family like ours. It offered great help to our family,” she said.

2 COMMENTS

  1. THIS IS NOT THE FIRST TIME THAT SUCH DANGEROUS HAPPENINGS ARE GOING ON IN LAHORE.IT IS DEPLORABLE TO STATE THAT INSIDE LAHORE CITY,THERE ARE LOTS OF FACTORIES AND ARE WORKING.THE LOCAL ADMINISTRATION MUST TAKE NOTICE OF THESE THINGS.IN SANDHA AREA AND NOW IN BAND ROAD WHERE HUNDRED OF HUNDREDS OF INNOCENT AND POOR CITIZENS ARE RESIDING,THERE ARE MANY FACTORIES.WHY THE LOCAL MANAGEMENT IS SILENT.ARE THEY WAITING FOR A BIG TRADEGIES? IN LOCAL STREETS TOO MANY UNLAWFUL FACTORIES ARE FUNCTIONING.

  2. Since Shabaz Sharif has become Chief Minister Punjab, people have not seen Lahore anything except death and destruction.

    SHAHID HUSSEIN QABOOLPURIA,
    LAHORE, PAKISTAN

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