The number of victims in Saturday’s rockslide in Cairo continues to raise
reaching 48 by Monday as the authorities are trying to rescue survivors and
recover the dead.
Hundreds of tons of limestone came crashing down on Saturday
morning upon the Doweiqa neighbourhood of a massive shanty town known as
Manshiet Nasser on the edge of the Egyptian capital.
Fifty-four survivors are being treated for their injuries.
Hundreds of Doweiqa citizens have settled down in temporary tents in Manshiet
Nasser and Fostat public park, which has been turned into a short-term camp for
Doweiqa's citizens, security forces told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.
They are waiting for the government to provide apartments for them.
The Ministry of Social Solidarity and the Red Crescent helped to move people
struck by the tragedy.
Meanwhile, the government said they had previously warned Doweiqa's citizens of
the imminent catastrophe and provided them with substitute apartments, but they
refused to move.
The citizens deny that they snubbed the government's offer, saying they agreed
to move.
Extreme poverty made the people prefer to live in shanty towns than pay rent of
13 dollars per month.
Eight rocks, weighing between 100 and 500 tons, separated from the cliff face
and crashed down on some 35 houses that lie at the foot of Moqattam hill in
Manshiet Nasser.
An unknown number of people, possibly in the hundreds, were still trapped under
the debris.
According to the independent al-Masry al-Youm newspaper, clashes between the
police and residents broke out as they refused to remove six houses to make
room for heavy lifting equipment that has been unable to enter the narrow
streets, hampering efforts to remove the debris.
Some 1.3 million people live in the Moqattam area, mostly in extreme poverty.
Infrastructure and services are minimal, as housing developed informally when
rural dwellers moved to the city over several decades.
In 1994, a similar accident occurred in the Manshiet Nasser area when a falling
rock killed 30 people.
In 2007, the Egyptian government began a programme to upgrade and develop the
ring of shanty towns around Cairo
in which millions of Egyptians live.
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