Saturday November 22, 2008

Hopes fade for Cairo victims


Race against time: People search amongst the rubble where a rockslide hit a Cairo shanty town on Saturday.Thirty-one people were killed and 47 were injured after huge boulders, each weighing 'hundreds of tonnes' one official said, had crushed some 35 homes. Rescuers worked through the night in a desperate race to find survivors of the tragedy, with some estimates putting the number of people still missing at 500. residents had been ordered to vacate the area in order to tear down some of the homes to make way for cranes and heavy lifting machinery which had been unable to access the scene of Saturday's accident.Picture: Reuters

Monday, September 8, 2008

Residents hurl stones at authorities for "inefficient" rescue efforts

HOPES of finding survivors trapped under giant boulders began to fade yesterday, a day after a massive rockslide flattened homes in a north Cairo shantytown, burying whole families under the rubble.

"There is little hope of finding anyone alive," an officer at the scene told AFP. "The heat and dust are unbearable, the people standing here can hardly take it, let alone those trapped inside."

He said residents had been ordered to vacate the area in order to tear down some of the homes to make way for cranes and heavy lifting machinery which had been unable to access the scene of Saturday's accident.

People hurriedly packed belongings and streamed toward nearby shelters provided by the government until further notice, an AFP correspondent said.

According to the health ministry, at least 31 people were killed and 47 injured in Saturday's accident after huge boulders, each weighing "hundreds of tonnes" one official said, had crushed some 35 homes.

Earlier yesterday, furious residents of the impoverished and densely populated neighbourhood hurled stones and insults at authorities for "inefficient" rescue efforts.

"Residents are throwing stones at police and shouting at civil defence officials. They are angry because they say rescue efforts are slow and inefficient," a security official said on condition of anonymity.

Witnesses told AFP that they had been told to vacate the area and leave the rescue work to the experts, sparking anger among shocked and grieving residents.

Rescuers worked through the night in a desperate race to find survivors of the tragedy, with some estimates putting the number of people still missing at 500.

The section of hill that broke away was estimated at 60 metres wide and 15 metres long.

Rescuers were using their bare hands to shift debris in a desperate bid to find victims while specially trained dog handlers were deployed to try to locate survivors.

President Hosni Mubarak ordered the government to provide housing for those left homeless and issue compensation to families of the victims, the state-owned Al-Ahram newspaper reported.

After an emergency meeting on Saturday evening, Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif said there would be a full review of housing settlements built throughout the country without construction permits, known as "ashwaeeyat".

"It was horrible, like an earthquake," said Farghali Gharib, who lost eight members of his family in the rockslide five sisters, a sister-in-law and her two children.

The reason for the rockfall was not immediately known but angry residents said work had been taking place on the hill for several weeks, and that the authorities had been warned about the dangers.

"They (authorities) were doing some work up on the hill. I am sure this is what caused the rockslide," said shoemaker Mohamed Gaber.

Mohamed al-Sayyed, 80, too blamed the authorities. "They had said they would evacuate the entire neighbourhood in order to set up an industrial zone. We were happy about this... but they did no such thing."

Driver Abdel Latif Hossam said "there had already been some landslides, slightly hurting some people".

Others said that the area where the disaster struck had been declared unsafe but that alternative housing promised to them had been sold off.

The interior ministry said in a statement that plans were underway to evacuate the area in a month's time.

Most of the brick-built dwellings in the district have two floors and were put up without adhering to planning regulations and without construction permits.

The arid Moqattam hill is broken up by chalky rock slopes, and a number of unofficial housing areas are huddled at its base, along the length of a main road into the city.

Egypt has a poor track record of building safety often blamed on the flouting of construction regulations, particularly involving adding extra floors without permission.

AFP