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National Disaster Response Force personnel look for survivors during a rescue operation at the site where an advertisement hoarding collapsed on a fuel station after a dust storm in Mumbai on May 13.
Photo courtesy by AFP
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MUMBAI (AFP) — Police in India’s financial capital have opened a criminal case against the owner of a huge billboard that collapsed on a petrol station and killed 14 people, media reports said Tuesday.
The giant 70 by 50-meter billboard in Mumbai’s east collapsed on Monday as fierce winds buffeted the city, accompanied by rain and dust storms.
Local authorities confirmed Tuesday that 14 people had died in the accident with 75 more injured, with rescue operations still underway.
“Medical treatment is currently being provided to 44 injured individuals, with 31 already discharged after receiving treatment,” the city’s municipal corporation said in a post on social media platform X.
“Unfortunately, 14 people (succumbed) to death in this mishap,” it added. “Rescue operations are ongoing at the site.”
Gaurav Chauhan of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) told Agence France-Presse that the billboard’s collapse on top of a petrol pump had complicated rescue efforts.