One person was killed and 17 injured early yesterday after a bridge being built to extend New Delhi’s six-year-old metro system collapsed, police said.
Delhi police spokesman Rajan Bhagat said rescue efforts to free people still trapped in the rubble were underway.
Television reports said at least two people had died and added that the toll was expected to rise.
A 150m section of the bridge came crashing down, trapping a passenger-filled bus in the eastern part of the Indian capital, the Press Trust of India said.
Metro official Vijay Anand told reporters at the site the accident was due to a “technical failure” and that an inquiry would be carried out.
TV footage showed massive crowds gathered around huge metal girders that lay haphazardly on the ground.
New Delhi launched its metro system in 2002, and its cleanliness and efficiency have been frequently lauded by officials and visitors to the city.
Metro authorities are under severe pressure to get new train lines up and running by 2010, when Delhi will host the Commonwealth Games, and construction has been taking place night and day.
BLOODSHED: North Koreans take extreme measures to avoid being taken prisoner and sometimes execute their own forces, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Saturday said that Russian and North Korean forces sustained heavy losses in fighting in Russia’s southern Kursk region. Ukrainian and Western assessments say that about 11,000 North Korean troops are deployed in the Kursk region, where Ukrainian forces occupy swathes of territory after staging a mass cross-border incursion in August last year. In his nightly video address, Zelenskiy quoted a report from Ukrainian Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi as saying that the battles had taken place near the village of Makhnovka, not far from the Ukrainian border. “In battles yesterday and today near just one village, Makhnovka,
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