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Metropol building collapse day 6: Death toll rises to 28 amid search efforts

The photo shows the scene of a collapsed building in the southwestern Iranian port city of Abadan in Khuzestan province, while search teams are looking for more bodies to retrieve on May 27, 2022. (Photo by Tasnim)

The number of people killed when a large building collapsed in the southwestern city of Abadan last week has risen to 28, state media say.

A large section of the 10-story Metropol building that was under construction in Abadan, Khuzestan province collapsed on Monday.

The building included two towers, one already built and the other under construction, though its bottom commercial floors had been opened for a few days and already had tenants. At the time of the collapse the construction work was still continuing above.

The collapse is the deadliest incident of its kind in Iran for years. It has blocked the city’s busiest road, with surrounding buildings evacuated.

Due to the fear of adjacent buildings' imminent collapse, search operations are moving slowly and carefully.

Vahid Shabani, the head of Khuzestan province Red Crescent Society, said that searches through the rubble will last until the last body is retrieved.  

The building’s poor safety standards seem to be the cause of the collapse, however, an investigation is underway to decide what caused the incident.

Iranian Vice President Mohammad Mokhber told state TV he believed there had been "widespread corruption" during the construction of the tower.

According to local authorities, legally the building was only allowed to have six floors, but four more floors were added when it was built.

So far, 13 people linked to the deadly incident have been arrested and their possession are confiscated to compensate for the losses inflicted on the victims and public properties, Sadeq Ja’fari Chegani, the public prosecutor of Khuzestan, told Fars news agency.

“A special working group is tasked with investigating the matter from various aspects to both sentence the culprits and compensate for the losses victims have suffered,” Chegani said, adding that “to cover the losses victims and public properties have sustained, some of the assets found in the possessions [of the culprits] are confiscated.”

He also said that the building's owner is confirmed to have been killed in the collapse as DNA evidence has proven his identity.

Police Special Units to establish peace in the city

Hassan Karami, the commander of the Special Units of the Iranian Police Force, also said that police forces at the scene are establishing peace in the city and help the victims along with other rescue and relief teams.

He said that while negative coverage by the foreign broadcasters are aimed to provoke protests and “disturb public opinion,” forces of the Special Units are staying with people until the end of the rescue operation.

Iran’s leader urges an “exemplary punishment” for culprits

In a message on Thursday, Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei offered condolences over the loss of lives in the building collapse.

He called for the rescue operation to be accelerated and the casualty toll minimized while asking for an “exemplary punishment” for the culprits.

“The unfortunate incident in Abadan, in addition to the need for expediting action and the use of all capacities to reduce casualties, which is now of paramount importance, lays the responsibility with all of us — the officials of the country — to pursue the culprits of the incident and to give exemplary punishment to them with the cooperation of the judiciary, as well as to make a concerted effort to prevent its recurrence in all parts of the country,” the statement read.


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