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20 April 2024

Anger grows after deadly French building collapse

Photo: AP

Published
By AFP/AP

A sixth body was found Wednesday in the rubble of two dilapidated buildings that collapsed in the French city of Marseille, where furious residents have accused authorities of ignoring warnings about the state of housing for the poorest.

As many as eight people are feared to have been killed when the buildings crumbled in a matter of seconds on Monday morning in Noailles, a working-class district in the heart of the Mediterranean port city.

Several other buildings in the narrow street have been evacuated amid fears of further collapse as "all the buildings lean against each other" on the sloping street, a firefighter involved in the search for survivors said.

Marseille prosecutor Xavier Tarabeux told a news conference Wednesday that a person living in one of the collapsed buildings phoned firefighters the night before the cave-in to say "that one of the cracks in her flat had widened".

 

She later called back to say "there wasn't any need to come round", he added.

It was too early to say what caused the collapse, Tarabeux said.

Firefighters had ordered 105 residents to leave the building, and on Wednesday escorted small groups back inside to fetch some of their belongings.

"It brings back my memories of the war, when I was a child," said Yoanna, a 27-year-old Lebanese woman.

"I've never had to leave an apartment so quickly."

After searching the rubble for a second night, rescuers had retrieved the bodies of four men and two women, Tarabeux told AFP earlier.

"We're working hard, so there's still hope," a rescue worker told AFP at dawn on Wednesday as his team continued to search the wreckage with sniffer dogs.

But Interior Minister Christophe Castaner had already warned on Monday evening that there was "little chance of finding air pockets" in the rubble.

In a separate incident, a building with three apartments also collapsed in the centre of Charleville-Mezieres in northeast France, with firefighters reporting no victims for the moment, the local L'Union newspaper said.

One woman was rescued and around 50 more evacuated from neighboring buildings, it said.

'People died for nothing'

The difficult rescue operation - and the fragility of the buildings - became clear when a third adjoining block partially collapsed on Monday evening.

Google Maps images taken in recent months showed large cracks in the facades of the buildings, only one of which was occupied.

Those on either side were in such a poor state that they had been declared off limits and boarded up for a number of years.

City officials said building experts inspected the occupied building on October 18 and shoring up work was then carried out before residents were allowed back in.

Residents say structural problems were widely known, but city officials did little when alerted about them.

"Everybody knew about the problems," said Patrick Lacoste, a spokesman for a local housing action group.

Anger simmered among the hundred or so residents and activists who gathered for a meeting near the scene, some of them insulting Marseille's mayor and his housing secretary as "killers".

A few dozen people held a moment of silence for the victims.

Adama, originally from the Comoro Islands, said: "It's only blacks and Arabs living here, so nobody cares."

"I pay rent -- 380 euros ($430) a month -- and I even pay a municipal housing tax. But you've seen the state of the buildings," the young man said.

Sophie Dorbeaux told AFP she had left the now-demolished block on Sunday night to stay with her parents because her door, like several others, was not opening or closing properly.

"The walls had been moving for several weeks and cracks had appeared," the 25-year-old philosophy student said.

"It could have been me," she added, visibly shaken.

4th victim found in rubble of French buildings

A French prosecutor says rescuers have found a fourth body in the ruins of two buildings that collapsed in the southern city of Marseille as a search through mounds of debris continues.

Marseille prosecutor Xavier Tabareux said the body of a woman was recovered after three other dead people were found in the rubble earlier Tuesday: two men and another woman.

Authorities have not disclosed the identities of the victims.

Several other people remain missing.

Dozens of police officers and firefighters have worked to nonstop since the buildings collapsed Monday.