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Woman found alive in rubble of Bangladesh factory 17 days after collapse Woman found alive in rubble of Bangladesh factory 17 days after collapse
(about 1 hour later)
Rescue workers were stunned on Friday afternoon when a female garment worker was rescued alive from the rubble 17 days after the Rana Plaza building collapsed outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. A woman has been rescued from the rubble of a garment factory building in Bangladesh that collapsed 17 days ago killing more than 1,000 people, police and military officials said.
Reshma Begum, who identified herself as a seamstress who worked on the 3rd floor of Rana Plaza, had been breathing through a pipe from inside the wreckage, soldiers conducting the rescue operation said. Emergency service workers pulled Reshma Begum, a seamstress who was working on the third floor of the factory when its central portion fell in shortly after the day's work had started, from piles of debris on Friday.
Abdur Razzaq, an army sergeant who helped to rescue Begum, said she had been hitting the concrete with the pipe and he had heard the sound after bulldozers had lifted loose rubble covering the spot. The 24 April disaster, in an industrial zone on the outskirts of the capital Dhaka, is one of the world's worst ever industrial accidents.
"I heard the sound and rushed towards the spot. I knelt down and heard a faint voice. 'Sir, please help me,' she cried," he said. The Rana Plaza building developed cracks before collapsing but workers were forced to remain inside by management. A number of major western retailers, including British high street giant Primark, were being supplied by factories based in the building.
Begum told rescuers she was unhurt and had survived by scavenging for biscuits in the rucksacks of dead colleagues. Around two thirds of over 3,000 workers thought to be in the building at the time of the collapse managed to flee. However, as many as 1,500, according to some estimates, may have been buried by rubble.
Begum's body was covered in dust and her hair was completely white. A woman wailing near the wreckage said Reshma was her niece. "We'd only expected to see her body," she cried. With an official death toll standing at 1,050, relatives and rescue workers had given up hope of finding anyone else alive.
As Begum was lifted from the rubble, crowds ringing the site broke into cheers of "God is great!" Rescue workers were seen wiping away tears. However, around 3pm today/fridayon Friday workers at the site heard a faint metallic tapping as bulldozers moved in to remove debris covering what had been the basement of the building.
Army officers co-ordinating the rescue expressed astonishment at finding a survivor in the rubble at a time when the operation was winding down. "We were removing slabs," said Lt Col SM Imran-Uz-Zaman, an army spokesman at the site. "We immediately halted work in all other areas and focused on the rescue."
Abdur Razzaq, an army sergeant, said Begum had been hitting the concrete with the pipe to alert approaching rescue workers and he heard the sound after bulldozers lifted loose rubble that had been covering the spot.
"I heard the sound and rushed towards the spot. I knelt down and heard a faint voice. Sir, please help me, she cried," Razzaq told the Guardian.
The woman had been breathing through a pipe from inside the wreckage, Razzaq said, and had sustained no serious injury.
Begum told rescuers she had survived by scavenging for biscuits in the rucksacks of dead colleagues and drinking rainwater.
Handsaws were used to cut her free.
A woman wailing near the wreckage said Begum was her niece.
"We'd only expected to see her body," she cried.
As the woman was lifted from the rubble, crowds at the site broke into cheers of "God is great!" Rescue workers were seen wiping away tears.
Daily life in much of the capital ground to a halt as Dhaka's inhabitants watched the rescue unfold live on local television.
Army officers co-ordinating the rescue expressed astonishment at finding a survivor in the rubble.
"It is incredible that someone could have survived in the wreckage 408 hours after the building came down," Lieutenant Shah Jamal said. "Her will to live is amazing. We've given her oxygen and she has been rushed to hospital.""It is incredible that someone could have survived in the wreckage 408 hours after the building came down," Lieutenant Shah Jamal said. "Her will to live is amazing. We've given her oxygen and she has been rushed to hospital."
Army officials said the death toll had reached 1,050 on Friday afternoon. An earlier bid to rescue a woman found in the debris more than 100 hours after the building collapsed went disastrously wrong when sparks from a saw ignited a fire, killing her and fatally burning a rescue worker.
Nine people have been arrested in connection with the disaster, including the owner of Rana Plaza and owners of the factories it housed.
The disaster has sparked widespread criticism of the international retailers supplied by businesses in Rana Plaza.
The government has blamed the owners and builders of the eight-storey complex for using shoddy construction materials, including substandard rods, bricks and cement, and not obtaining the necessary clearances.
Primark and its Canadian counterpart Loblaw have announced they will compensate the victims of the disaster, the world's worst industrial accident since the Bhopal gas leak in India in 1984.
There have been a series of deadly accidents in Bangladesh's garment industry, which accounts for 80% of the country's exports and employs around 4 million people. There was a fire in November that killed 114 people, while a fire killed eight people at another garment factory in Dhaka earlier this week. That facility is believed to have conformed to local health and safety regulations.
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