ALEXANDRIA: Rescuers pulled seven more bodies early on Wednesday out of the rubble of a 12-storey building which collapsed in Alexandria, bringing the death toll to 19, a senior police official said.
A couple in their 40s were the latest to be extracted from the debris, said Major General Kamal El-Dali, the head of the Alexandria police investigative division.
He added that rescue workers with sniffing dogs continued their search for eight other people feared dead while hope of finding them alive on the third day since the collapse.
Only three people were rescued out of some 30, the estimated number of the building residents, according to Major General Abdel Meguid Selim, who spoke to the Associated Press on Tuesday night.
“We are in a race against time, Selim said. “We hope to get as many victims alive as possible, he added.
The local government had previously ordered the building, located in the Loran suburb, to be demolished down or renovated as it was built without authorization more than 25 years ago, according to Mena news agency.
A police official said the building, built in 1978, originally had seven stories but five additional ones were built in recent years.
Selim, however, cautioned that it was too early to tell what caused the building to collapse.