World

Kenya building collapse: Death toll rises to 20, with 73 people still missing

Kenyan rescuers continued searching for survivors Sunday of a residential building in a low income area that collapsed Friday, as officials said the death toll has risen to 20 and 73 people remain missing.

Building had been declared unfit for human habitation but was not torn down

Rescue workers search for residents feared trapped in the rubble of a residential building that collapsed Friday after days of heavy rain in Nairobi, Kenya. (Thomas Mukoya/Reuters)

Kenyan rescuers continued searching Sunday for survivors of a residential building in a low-income area in Nairobi that collapsed Friday, as officials said the death toll has risen to 20 and 73 people remain missing.

Police chief Japheth Koome confirmed the death toll.

Authorities had initially said the building had six storeys but it emerged that the ground and first floor had sunk following heavy rains.

The building, next to a river, had been declared unfit for human habitation by Kenya's National Construction Authority but was not torn down.

Bribe-taking officers in the county government are responsible for allowing contractors to bypass building codes, Nairobi governor Evan Kidero said. He vowed to fire those responsible.

The building's owner obeyed police orders and turned himself in for questioning, Koome said.

A woman carries her belongings as she leaves Nairobi's Huruma neighbourhood after the building collapse. The building, next to a river, had been declared unfit for human habitation by Kenya's National Construction Authority but was not torn down. (Thomas Mukoya/Reuters)

"People who've died in Huruma have died an unnecessary death. That death is a product of corruption … someone is paid $10,000 or$20,000 to approve the building that cost the lives of Kenyans," nominated legislator Johnson Sakaja said.

Kenyan military personnel led the rescue operation using heavy machinery to remove concrete slabs. About 300 residents of two adjacent buildings — also built close the river — were evacuated.

Taking advantage of a high demand for housing in Nairobi, some property developers bypass building regulations to cut costs and maximize profits.

President Uhuru Kenyatta last year ordered an audit of all the country's buildings to see if they are up to code after eight buildings collapsed, killing at least 15 people.

The report from the audit by the National Construction Authority found that 58 per cent of buildings in the capital are unfit for habitation. The majority of Nairobi's estimated 4 million people live in low income areas or slums.