A woman was pulled alive Friday from the ruins of a garment factory
complex in Bangladesh more than 1ys 6 daafter it collapsed and killed
over 1,000 people.
The miraculous rescue came shortly after
emergency officials announced that the woman called Reshmi had been
located under the rubble of the nine-storey Rana Plaza complex after
crying out for help.
She was found sheltering in the ruins of a basement mosque.
Rescuers cheered loudly as she was carried to an army ambulance, managing a faint smile at
the crowds who had gathered.
The
country’s fire service chief told AFP that the woman appeared to have
had access to water during her marathon ordeal trapped underneath the
wreckage of the nine-storey Rana Plaza complex, which had caved in on 24
April.
“She has been located in a gap between a beam and a
column. Her name is Reshmi. She may have reserves of water or have drunk
some of the water that we’ve pumped into the building,” Ahmed Ali told
AFP.
One of the rescuers said that the woman
had cried out for help as recovery teams sifted through the wreckage in
the town of Savar on the outskirts of the capital Dhaka.
“As we were clearing rubble, we called out if anyone was alive,” the unnamed rescuer told a private TV channel.
“Then we heard her saying ‘please save me, please save me’.”
Another
rescuer said that the woman had had access to food supplies for the
first fortnight of her ordeal but had run out two days ago.
“She said she has not eaten for the last two days. She said she has eaten some dried food like biscuits,” said the rescuer.
“She said she had found a safe place and found some air and light.”
News
of the miracle survival came as recovery teams were preparing to wrap
up their work at the site after discovering scores more corpses in the
tangle of concrete overnight.
Brigadier General Siddiqul Alam, one
of the leaders of the recovery operation, said the toll now stands at
1,041, making it one of the world’s deadliest industrial disasters.
Alam
said many of the bodies were little more than skeletons and the stench
from under the rubble suggested that many more were still to be located.
“We
have found a huge number of bodies in the stairwell and under the
staircases. When the building started to collapse, workers thought they
would be safe under the staircases,” he said.
“Each time we moved a slab of concrete, we found a stack of bodies.”
More than 3,000 workers were on shift on the morning of April 24 when the building suddenly caved in.
Most
were earning around $40 a month to make clothing for Western brands
such as Italy’s Benetton, Britain’s Primark and the Spanish label Mango.
Efforts
to identify victims have been hampered by the decomposition of bodies,
although some were found with mobile phones in their pockets or identity
cards around their necks.
The preliminary findings of a
government probe blamed vibrations from four giant generators on the
upper floors for triggering the collapse.
Police have arrested 12
people including the plaza’s owner and four factory bosses for forcing
people to work on the day of the disaster, even though cracks appeared
in the structure the day before.
The collapse was the latest in a
string of disasters to blight the textile industry, with a factory fire
last November killing 111 workers.
A fire at a textile factory in Dhaka on Thursday killed eight people, including its owner.
Bangladesh is the world’s second-largest apparel maker and the $20
billion industry accounted for up to 80 percent of annual exports last
year.
But it has a shocking safety record and Western retailers
have been threatening to pull out unless authorities come up with a
credible programme to raise standards in the 4,500 factories. Disney has
already done so.
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