Kariakoo building collapse: Tanzanian rescuers send water to trapped
Vocabulary: 212, Words: 351

1Rescue teams in Tanzania say they have managed to establish contact with people who are still trapped a day after a four-storey building collapsed in the biggest city, Dar es Salaam.
2They are managing to send them supplies of water, glucose and oxygen through small gaps in the debris.
3Tapping sounds have been heard from inside the building in the city's busy Kariakoo market area.
4Thirteen people are known to have died, while 84 have so far been brought out alive, according to the latest figures from President Samia Suluhu Hassan.
5She said the prime minister would now lead a "thorough inspection" of all buildings in the Kariakoo area.
6The president added that the police would collect full details of the collapsed building from its owner.
7Large crowds of bystanders applauded as rescue teams ferried survivors on stretchers past huge piles of concrete debris to take them to hospital.
8Seven people were rescued on Sunday from the building's basement, Dar es Salaam’s regional commissioner Albert Chalamila told The Citizen newspaper.
9"We are hopeful that more survivors will be found," he said.
10It is not clear how many people remain trapped.
11Prime Minister Kassim Majaliwa said the authorities "won’t rest until we have made sure we have been able to rescue each and every person or soul who is trapped in the rubble".
12After the building first gave way at about 09:00 local time (06:00 GMT) on Saturday morning, hundreds of first responders used sledgehammers and their bare hands to pull away the debris, reports the AFP news agency.
13Cranes and other heavy machinery were later brought in to help.
14Fortunately, the building came down before the market area had become too busy.
15Authorities are yet to determine the cause of the collapse, but investigations are expected to begin once rescue efforts are complete.
16Dar es Salaam is one of the world's fastest-growing cities and reports say that building regulations are not always enforced.
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from BBC