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"A large number of people come to Delhi in search of jobs. This was cheap accommodation for a lot of them," said Deep Mathur, a city official. Poor construction material and inadequate foundations often are blamed for building collapses in India. In New Delhi, where land is at a premium, unscrupulous builders often break building laws to add additional floors to existing structures. Dikshit blamed the builder for the poor construction and maintenance of the building and said the government would probe whether he had the necessary permits to add floors. The building -- like its twin next door, which was evacuated by police -- was constructed of crude brick masonry with splintered wooden window frames in a neighborhood of muddy, narrow streets. It housed migrants from the states of Bihar and West Bengal in 80 rooms, with anywhere from three to six residents in each room, residents said. The rooms rented for 2,000 to 3,000 rupees ($44 to $66) a month. Yoginder Chandolia, another city official, said water from this season's unusually heavy monsoon rains
-- which forced the Yamuna to overflow its banks -- had sent water cascading into the basement of the building. "During the recent flood, water reached the building's foundation and weakened it considerably, resulting in the collapse," he said. Residents were angry that police and firefighters took so long to arrive after the building collapsed about 8:15 p.m. Monday. "They took more than 45 minutes to reach the site. And then there was confusion about how they were going to bring in the ambulances," resident Mohinder Singh said. But municipal officials said they had enormous problems navigating the narrow alleyways. "Our biggest hurdle was to get vehicles through. Even ambulances got stuck," said Mathur.
[Associated
Press;
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