One dead and seven injured after building collapses in Istanbul
The three-story building collapsed at around 8:40 a.m., as
authorities have yet to determine the cause of the incident. The ground
floor of the building housed a shop, the top floor an office, while
families resided on the intermediate floors.
Rescue teams and
firefighters managed to pull seven people out of the rubble shortly
after the incident. After about an hour of efforts, the body of one
person was retrieved from the debris. At around 11:50 a.m., the last
trapped individual was rescued, albeit injured.
Images from a camera across the street showed passengers waiting to board a public minibus at the time of the collapse narrowly escape being struck by falling debris.
Providing
information about the collapse, Istanbul Governor Davut Gül mentioned
that two of the injured are in critical condition, announcing that an
investigation has been initiated into the incident.
"There is no determined cause for the collapse of the building
constructed in 1988. Therefore, we will inform you in the coming hours
and days. Our Chief Public Prosecutor is at the scene. Subsequent legal
and administrative processes will proceed,” he said.
In a written
statement, Environment, Urbanization and Climate Change Minister Mehmet
Özhaseki confirmed that the building was constructed 36 years ago.
One and a half floors were illegally added after its construction, the minister revealed.
"Initial inspections on-site indicate that the building, constructed
in 1988, was built without adhering to architectural and engineering
standards, using sea sand in its construction and subsequent
interventions that compromised the building's structural integrity,"
Özhaseki stated.
Küçükçekmece Mayor Kemal Çelebi informed private
broadcaster CNN Türk that the top floor of the collapsed building was
illegally constructed.
"The top floor is illegal, there is no column cutting. The Istanbul
Municipality conducts the inspections of old buildings. The condition of
this building was not determined. Some residents are hesitant to have
their buildings inspected, fearing what they would do if they were to
collapse," Çelebi remarked.
One of the building owners in the
neighborhood told Demirören News Agency that they had witnessed
discussions on urban renewal in anticipation of the long-awaited major
Marmara earthquake.
He claimed that many buildings in the neighborhood had been evacuated
by agreeing to participate in urban renewal, and local authorities had
cut off electricity and gas flow to many structures in the vicinity.
However, the owner of the building that collapsed on June 2 declined to join the project due to "personal reasons," he said.
Urban transformation projects involve the demolition of buildings in earthquake-prone areas, particularly Istanbul, and the construction of earthquake-resistant structures in their place.
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