Six-storey building collapses in Beirut
At least 26 people were killed when an old six-storey building in the Lebanese capital collapsed, officials said on Monday, with more people still trapped under the rubble.
"Until now, 26 bodies have been recovered and we believe there are more buried under the building that collapsed Sunday evening," Red Cross official Georges Kettaneh told the media.
A dozen people were also injured, none of them seriously.
Civil defence chief General Raymond Khattar told AFP the bodies recovered by rescuers who worked through Sunday night and Monday included those of seven Lebanese, six Sudanese, two Filipinos and two Egyptians.
Among the dead was a 15-year-old Lebanese girl, and those hurt included her grandmother as well as a 73-year-old Lebanese man, at least two Sudanese, an Egyptian and a Filipina.
In Amman, the foreign ministry spokesman said three Jordanians were killed: a husband and wife and their grandson.
The building housed some 50 people, many of them labourers from Sudan and Egypt, Khattar said, adding that at least eight people were known to have escaped as the building came down.
A Syrian labourer at a nearby building site said debris started falling in the early evening before the entire block came crashing down.
"We saw small pieces of stone falling down but no one paid any attention at the start," he told the media. "Then large chunks of stone started falling and people began screaming for everyone to get out. Within minutes, the building was on the floor."
One resident who escaped with her mother said the building was extremely run-down and the owner had warned tenants not to remain there shortly before it disintegrated.
"It was like an earthquake," another witness told the local MTV channel.
Several anxious relatives remained at the site on Monday hoping for news of their loved ones. Many wept and others prayed as rescuers painstakingly sifted through the rubble, aided by bulldozers.
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