More bodies recovered from rubble of gas blast

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This handout picture released by The Russian Emergency Situations Ministry on January 1, 2019, shows emergency officers transporting a survivor after a gas explosion rocked a residential building in Russia’s Urals city of Magnitogorsk. Photo: AFP

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Map locating the city of Magnitogorsk in the Ural mountains in Russia where a 10-month-old boy was pulled out of rubble Tuesday at the site of a gas explosion a day earlier. Photo: AFP

MOSCOW: Rescuers hunted for survivors Wednesday in the rubble of a Russian apartment building hit by a New Year’s Eve gas explosion, but found only bodies as the number of confirmed dead rose to 18.

Nearly two dozen people were still missing following the explosion, which destroyed 35 apartments in the high-rise in the city of Magnitogorsk in the Ural mountains.

Braving temperatures that fell as low as minus 27 degrees Celsius (minus 16 degrees Fahrenheit), rescue workers were combing through mangled concrete and metal.

Their efforts were given a boost on Tuesday when a 10-month-old baby boy was found alive and reunited with his mother. But hope was starting to fade of finding many more survivors.

The emergency situations ministry said in a statement that as of 12:15 Moscow time (0915 GMT) the bodies of 18 people, including two children, had been recovered from the partly collapsed building.

Six people, including two children, had been rescued and 23 people were still missing.

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“Work at the scene is continuing,” it said, noting that 800 square metres of debris — loaded into 50 dump trucks — had been cleared from the site in the last 24 hours.

The explosion, believed to have been caused by a gas leak, tore through the nine-storey building in Magnitogorsk, an industrial town nearly 1,700 kilometres (1,050 miles) east of Moscow, in the early hours of Monday.

This handout picture released by The Russian Emergency Situations Ministry on January 1, 2019, shows emergency officers transporting a survivor after a gas explosion rocked a residential building in Russia’s Urals city of Magnitogorsk. Photo: AFP

Witnesses described a “wave of fire” from the explosion and said the blast was strong enough to shatter windows in nearby buildings.

The Soviet-era apartment block was home to about 1,100 people and the blast left dozens homeless over the New Year — the biggest holiday of the year in Russia.

Tuesday’s recovery of the infant boy offered a rare moment of hope, with officials describing his rescue as a “New Year’s miracle”.

The boy was found in his cradle after rescuers heard him crying from within the rubble. He was brought to his mother, who had survived the blast, and then flown to Moscow for treatment.

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Russian television showed footage of the boy lying in a hospital bed watched by his tearful mother.

Medical officials in Moscow said the boy was in serious but stable condition after suffering from severe frostbite, a head injury and multiple fractures.

Residents left homeless by the explosion were being housed in a nearby school and helped by a team of psychologists.

Wednesday was a day of mourning in the region, with flags lowered and entertainment events cancelled, in a country where New Year’s Eve celebrations are an annual highlight.  – AFP

 

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