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Seven dead, dozens missing in Russia building collapse

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Emergency Situations employees work at the scene of a collapsed apartment building in Magnitogorsk, a city of 400,000 people, about 870 miles southeast of Moscow, Russia, today. Russian emergency officials say that at least four people have died after sections of the apartment building collapsed after an apparent gas explosion in the Ural Mountains region.

MOSCOW >> At least seven people died and dozens were missing today after an early-morning explosion, possibly ignited by a gas leak, caused part of a 10-story residential apartment building to collapse in the central Russian city of Magnitogorsk, local news agencies reported.

Cries for help could be heard from the rubble, news reports said, with hundreds of rescue workers scrambling to find survivors. Witnesses smelled gas in the area, and a leak was believed to be behind the explosion in the industrial city at the southern edge of the Ural Mountains, some 1,050 miles east of Moscow.

The head of the Emergencies Ministry, Yevgeny Zinichev, said workers had found seven bodies, the TASS news agency reported, and the local government of Magnitogorsk said as many as 45 people were missing and could be trapped. Authorities were racing to find remaining survivors because cold weather was complicating a relief effort that would be difficult even under normal circumstances.

The temperatures, already frigid during the day at 0 degrees, were expected to drop to about minus 17 at night, leaving anyone trapped vulnerable to exposure. There were also concerns that other parts of the building might collapse, a spokesman for the Emergencies Ministry said.

The eruption occurred around 6 a.m. local time today, a public holiday in Russia in advance of the new year, when most of the residents were asleep in the long building, which held 623 apartments. A total of 110 people lived in the 48 apartments in the section that was damaged or destroyed, the Emergencies Ministry said.

President Vladimir Putin traveled to the scene, where he observed the rescue effort and met the region’s governor before visiting some of the injured at a hospital.

“Despite the holiday season,” he said, “we need to spare a thought for those who perished and those who were injured.”

Russia has suffered several similar disasters in recent years related to aging infrastructure and poor safety practices. Earlier in 2018, 64 people were killed when a fire swept through a mall in the Siberian city of Kemerovo.

Authorities have started a criminal inquiry into whether the explosion in Magnitogorsk was the result of negligence.

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