Teenager found alive 50 hours after Pakistan factory collapse
Rescuers in Pakistan have pulled a teenage boy alive from
the rubble of a collapsed factory near Lahore 50 hours after the structure
toppled, officials said on Saturday. The teenager had been trapped for more
than two days after the collapse and his family, thinking him dead, had already
identified and buried another recovered body they believed to be his.
"An 18-year-old Muhammad Shahid was also evacuated alive 50 hours after the building collapsed by the blessing of God," Muhammad Usman, a top administration official in Lahore, told AFP.
The four-storey Rajput Polyester polythene bag factory came
crashing down on Wednesday evening, and at least 37 bodies have so far been
recovered from the wreckage.
Shahid's discovery ignited emotional scenes at the site as
workers chanted "Allah-O-Akbar (God is great)" and encouraged each
other to boost morale.
The news was a welcome surprise to his family who had
mistakenly identified the dead body of another boy earlier this week as Shahid
and buried the remains in their ancestral town of Kabirwala, some 265
kilometres (164 miles) from Lahore.
Officials have said at least 150 people were in the factory
when it came down and it was unclear how many, dead or alive, may still be
trapped.
Punjab chief minister Shahbaz Sharif has said the factory
may have suffered structural damage in the October 26 quake, which killed
almost 400 people across Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Provincial labour minister Raja Ashfaq Sarwar said that an
enquiry into the collapse "is being conducted and we will probe all
angles", with a report to be submitted within two weeks.
At least 24 people died last year when a mosque collapsed in
the same city, while more than 200 people lost their lives, mostly due to
collapsed roofs, following torrential rain and flooding in 2014.