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Dhaka building collapse: Woman pulled alive from rubble Dhaka building collapse: Woman pulled alive from rubble
(about 1 hour later)
A woman has been pulled alive from the ruins of a building that collapsed in a suburb of Bangladesh's capital, Dhaka, 17 days ago. A woman has been pulled alive from the ruins of an eight-storey building that collapsed in a suburb of Bangladesh's capital, Dhaka, 17 days ago.
The head of the fire service earlier said the woman, named Reshma, had been found in the remains of the second floor of the eight-storey Rana Plaza. Rescuers said the woman, named Reshma, was found in the remains of the second floor of the Rana Plaza after they heard her crying: "Please save me."
She had no serious injuries and had been talking with rescuers, he added. She has been taken to hospital, but is not thought to have serious injuries.
The dramatic news came after the army said more than 1,000 people were now known to have died in the disaster.The dramatic news came after the army said more than 1,000 people were now known to have died in the disaster.
The death toll is expected to keep climbing, as work crews using heavy machinery have begun removing rubble from the worst-damaged areas.The death toll is expected to keep climbing, as work crews using heavy machinery have begun removing rubble from the worst-damaged areas.
Cheers 'I'm still here'
On Friday afternoon, as soldiers cleared a floor, they heard sounds below, correspondents say. Soldiers were reported to have been preparing to break through a large concrete slab at about 15:15 local time (10:15 GMT) on Friday when the woman was discovered.
Officers immediately ordered workers to stop clearing the site. "As we were clearing rubble, we called out [to see] if anyone was alive," one unnamed rescuer told Somoy TV. "Then we heard her saying: 'Please save me, please save me.'"
Detection equipment was sent in and they saw a woman waving her hand. She shouted "I'm still here" and said her name was Reshma. Officers immediately ordered workers operating heavy machinery to stop.
Video and audio detection equipment was used to locate her exact position and rescuers saw a woman waving her hand. She shouted "I'm still here" and said her name was Reshma.
Within minutes, hundreds of soldiers and firefighters rushed to the scene to help clear the rubble, says the BBC Bengali service's Akbar Hossain.Within minutes, hundreds of soldiers and firefighters rushed to the scene to help clear the rubble, says the BBC Bengali service's Akbar Hossain.
Cutting and drilling equipment was brought in to get through iron rods and debris. Not long afterwards, she was pulled from the rubble and the crowd erupted in cheers, our correspondent says. The woman said that she was not badly hurt, and she was given water and biscuits while handsaws and drilling equipment were brought in to cut through iron rods and debris.
The woman was taken to an ambulance and then rushed to a nearby military hospital. At 16:25 (11:25 GMT), the woman was pulled from the rubble and the crowd erupted in cheers, our correspondent adds.
Rescuers said it was possible that the woman survived because of the large quantities of oxygen and water that were pumped into the ruins in the early stages of the rescue effort. The woman was taken to an ambulance and then rushed to the nearby Combined Military Hospital for evaluation and treatment.
Abdur Razzak, a warrant officer with the military's engineering department who first spotted her in the wreckage, told the Associated Press that she was OK and could even walk.
Another rescuer said the woman had had access to food for the first two weeks, but that her supplies 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," he told the AFP news agency. "She said she had found a safe place and found some air and light."
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