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Metropole Tower collapse: Ten dead, dozens missing, and security situation in Abadan

The rubble-clearing operation on Amiri Street in Abadan continues, and the fate of dozens of people is unknown. The Khuzestan Justice Department announced the arrest of 8 people involved in the construction of the building. The atmosphere in the city is tense, and people have beaten the mayor.

The search and rescue operation in the collapsed Metropole Tower is underway, and the CEO of the Khuzestan Red Crescent reports that the bodies of three more people have been found on the first floor of the building. On Tuesday morning, June 23, the death toll was announced at ten and the number of injured at 35. Dozens of people, including construction workers, are still trapped under the rubble.

At the same time, while the city's security situation is tense, Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi, along with Mohsen Rezaei, Ebrahim Raisi's economic deputy, arrived in Abadan to visit the site.

Shortly after the incident, angry Abadan residents beat up Mayor Hassan Hamidpour, who had issued a permit for the Metropole Twin Tower despite all the problems. Citizens blame a group of provincial and government officials for the collapse of the building and have chanted slogans against them.

Abadan's special governor, Ehsan Abbaspour, has warned that the structure could collapse completely. He said in a television interview that the building was under construction, but many social media users have asked how 10 shops on the ground floor were still operating and who had issued the permits for them to operate.

According to Ali Dehghani, the Chief Justice of Khuzestan, eight people have been arrested and summoned, including the owner and contractor, project supervisors, and Abadan municipality forces.

Local activists, however, have announced on social media that Hussein Abdul Baqi, the owner and builder of these towers, has fled and that rescue and debris removal operations are progressing slowly due to technical deficiencies.

ISNA news agency wrote after the collapse of part of the Metropole Tower: "The Metropole Twin Towers complex was so weak that the main pillar and support of the complexes had sunk and buckled. Images and videos published on social media also showed this. The owner had erected scaffolding around the project, which some claim was created with the aim of concealing the project's dire condition."

The 10-story twin tower was built by Abdul Baqi Construction Holding in Abadan’s Amiri neighborhood and was about to open. The “Tojarat News” website wrote: “The Metropole was neither an old building like Tehran’s Plasco, which could have collapsed due to wear and tear, nor was it built illegally, which could have caused its collapse due to non-structural factors.”

A number of urban activists had previously warned that this building could become a "killing ground" for citizens due to the lack of compliance with quality and sustainability principles.

Protests against the construction of this building led to experts from the Abadan Engineering System visiting it in February of last year and recording the issues.

After Ebrahim Raisi ordered his first deputy and the governor of Khuzestan to mobilize all resources to immediately address the incident, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf has also tasked the Parliament's Civil Engineering Commission with investigating and following up on the dimensions of the Metropol incident. The Speaker of the 11th Parliament also asked the law enforcement and security forces to identify the violators and refer those responsible to the judicial authorities. The Prosecutor General's Office of the Islamic Republic has also ordered that violators be dealt with decisively.

The efforts of government officials to follow up on the matter and visit the site come at a time when the owner and builder of the tower is known as "Sultan Arvand" and was selected as a top entrepreneur by the Ministry of Security last year and received the "Good Security Maker" plaque from the police commander of Khuzestan Province.

 

Source: DW

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