The bodies of three
people have been recovered in Brazil by rescue workers searching through
rubble after the collapse of two high-rise office buildings in Rio de
Janeiro.
Officials say that at least 19 people remain missing, while a further six were taken to hospital.
City Mayor Eduardo Paes said current investigations were focusing on structural problems.
The buildings, one of which was 20 storeys, collapsed late on Wednesday.
Mr Paes discounted speculation that a gas explosion could have caused the collapse.
The buildings, which were respectively 10 and
20 storeys high and were located near the Municipal Theatre and the
headquarters of oil giant Petrobras, crushed a four-storey construction
site on their way down.
Dozens of emergency workers attended the scene and police cordoned off the area.
Electricity to the street has been cut off for safety reasons.
Allesandro da Silva Fonseca told AFP he had been briefly
trapped in a lift with five construction workers after they tried to
escape. He said he had almost suffocated because of the dust.
"I was out of air. I could not breathe," he said.
Hugh Oliver, who was in the area when the collapse happened, told the BBC the situation was surreal.
"The city quickly filled with rescue vehicles and there was a
lot of helicopter activity. The dust cloud hung around for a long
time," he said.
Fire Department spokesman Moises Torres said that he had hopes of finding people alive, the news agency AFP reported.
Luiz Cosenza, a building inspector with Rio de Janeiro's
Regional Council of Engineering told Brazil's Globo televison network
that he feared illegal projects could have been a factor, AFP reported.
Mr Cosenza said: "Two projects were happening in the
building, on the 16th floor. They were illegal works - they were not
registered with the council."
Mr Oliver said he was not surprised by the falling building
and said: "The infrastructure is poor - only areas such as Barra de
Tijuca are modern and well regulated, but behind the main streets in the
centre of Rio there are crumbling dirty sidestreets where safety is |