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Miami building collapse: Rescuers listen for signs of life in rubble

Rescuers are desperately searching for any survivors trapped in the rubble of a collapsed 12-storey residential building north of Miami.

At least one person has been killed and 99 are still missing, officials say.

As families desperately wait for news, search teams say they are working around the clock and could hear people banging amid the debris.

What caused the 40-year-old building to collapse early on Thursday morning remains unclear.

At least 102 people have now been located, but it is uncertain how many were in the building when it came down. Dozens of survivors have been pulled out of the rubble.

As night fell, hundreds of rescuers were using sonar cameras and specially trained dogs as they scoured the rubble for survivors. Teams were tunnelling from an underground car park below the building in an effort to reach victims.

“Fire and rescue are in there with their search team, with their dogs,” Miami-Dade Police Director Freddy Ramirez told reporters.

“They’re in search-and-rescue mode, and they will be in that mode for a while. They are not quitting. They’re going to work through the night. They are not stopping.”

Search teams detected sounds of banging and other noises, but no voices coming from the tonnes of debris.

Rescue workers
image captionRescue teams with dogs scoured the rubble for survivors

But officials say the efforts are dangerous as further rubble could collapse on top of them.

“This process is slow and methodical,” said Ray Jadallah, Miami-Dade Fire Rescue assistant fire chief. “Any time we started breaching parts of the structure, we get rubble falling on us.”

Constant rain and storms are further complicating an already difficult task for the search-and-rescue teams.

Authorities have begun taking DNA samples from relatives of those still missing in case only remains of their family members are found in the rubble.

Relatives of the missing have been huddled around a community centre a few blocks from the collapsed building, waiting for information and fearing the worst.

Nicolas Fernandez said his calls to missing loved ones had gone unanswered.

“I think they’re gone,” he told CBS. “I don’t want to be pessimistic, but we’ve been calling them non-stop with no reply.”

Jenny Urgelles woke up to the news that her parents’ building had collapsed. She called them, but both their phones went straight to voicemail.

“I am holding on to hope. I’m very desperate to know what’s happening,” she told a local TV channel.

A large section of the oceanfront Champlain Towers in the town of Surfside crumbled to the ground in the early hours of Thursday.

Eyewitnesses described hearing what sounded like thunder before seeing a huge cloud of dust in the aftermath of the collapse. One compared the scene to the 11 September 2001 attacks on the Twin Towers in New York.

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On the ground

Will Grant, BBC News, Miami

The building is simply a mass of debris and rubble on the ground.

The entire side of it has been sheared off: a 12-storey wing is now reduced to rubble.

You can see straight into what would have been holiday apartments, small homes looking out on to the sea. You can still see parts of beds, parts of children’s bedrooms. All of it is exposed. It’s a very disturbing sight.

And a few blocks away there is a community centre where the family members are gathering.

The worst of it for them is they simply don’t have a handle on who was in the building, and whether or not their family members were even there.

Because some of them were holiday homes, it may be that some of the people being quoted as missing are not missing at all.

But as the hours pass by, that seems less and less likely – and we are getting a grim picture about how bad this could become.

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What caused the collapse?

We don’t yet know. A full investigation will begin after the rescue mission, officials said.

As the building has stood since 1980, it was due its standard 40-year review. The building was undergoing its “recertification” process and required repairs, officials said.

“There were structural issues obviously – the building did collapse,” Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine told reporters.

Composite image, comparing before and after part of the building in Surfside, Florida collapsed

Work was being done on the building’s roof, but Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said he did not see how that could have been the cause.

Experts who studied the building last year said it was unstable and had been sinking since the 1990s.

One study from a researcher at Florida International University found that the building, constructed on reclaimed wetlands, had been sinking at a rate of two millimetres per year for the last three decades, which may have affected the building structurally.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed an emergency declaration for Miami-Dade County that will provide assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to those dealing with the collapse.

President Joe Biden had promised to provide the aid if requested and the agency has been sent to Florida.

Source: BBC

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