The death toll from a suspension bridge collapse has risen to 134, including many children, as authorities open a criminal investigation into one of India’s deadliest accidents in the past 10 years.
Footage from just before the collapse showed a group of young men taking photos while others tried to rock the bridge from side to side, before they tumbled into the river below as the cables holding it together gave way.
Police in the western state of Gujarat, where the disaster occurred, registered a criminal case against unnamed persons responsible for the renovation, maintenance and management of the bridge. The government has formed a five-member investigative team.
Local officials told Reuters that the manager of the bridge, a maker of clocks and electrical items, had not informed the authorities that the bridge would be reopened last week after repairs, adding that no fitness certificate had been issued.
The colonial-era footbridge over the Machchhu River in the centre of Morbi town was packed with sightseers enjoying holiday festivities when it collapsed on Sunday evening, plunging people about 10 metres into the river.
Some 400 people had bought tickets to get onto the bridge to celebrate the Diwali and Chhath Puja festivals.
About 35 victims were under 14, according to a list of the deceased seen by Reuters. About 170 people had been rescued by the morning.
“People were hanging from the bridge after the accident, but they slipped and fell into the river when it collapsed,” said Raju, an eyewitness who gave only one name. “I could not sleep the entire night as I had helped in the rescue operation. I brought a lot of children to the hospital.”
Senior government official NK Muchhar said the death toll had gone up to 134. Another official said at the site that the river’s muddy waters were hampering rescue work and that there might be people trapped under the mangled remains of the bridge.
Gujarat-based electrical appliances maker Oreva group, known for its Ajanta clocks, had been in charge of maintaining the bridge for 15 years, said Sandeepsinh Zala, the chief officer of Morbi municipality.
“They did not give us any information that they were reopening the bridge,” Zala said. “We have not issued any fitness certificate to them.”
Jayrajsinh Jadeja, a local lawmaker from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, blamed Oreva for selling tickets without restrictions and said overcrowding led to the bridge collapse.
The bridge was previously maintained by the local municipality, which limited the number of people on the bridge at one time to 20, he said.
The Indian Express newspaper quoted an Oreva spokesperson as saying: “While we are waiting for more information, prima facie, the bridge collapsed as too many people in the mid-section of the bridge were trying to sway it from one way to the other.”
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the former chief minister of Gujarat, expressed his condolences to the victims’ families.
“In this hour of grief, the government is with the bereaved families in every manner,” he said.
The bridge is 1.25 metres wide and spans 233 metres connecting the Darbargadh Palace heritage hotel and the town. It was built in 1877 when India was a British colony.
Opposition politicians in Gujarat, where elections are due by early next year, said the disaster exposed the lack of oversight of infrastructure in the country.
“Not just extremely sad on bridge collapse in Morbi but also very angry. Because it was a tragedy in waiting,” Gurdeep Singh Sappal, a member of the Congress party, wrote on Twitter.
“For some time now, bridge collapse, roads caving-in, dams breaching are happening quite often.”
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