Rescuers carry an injured person from a collapsed factory building on July 4, 2015 in Wenling, China. The collapse of the shoe factory in Folong Village, Wenling City collapsed killed at least 12 people. Photo by ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images
Rescuers carry an injured person from a collapsed factory building on July 4, 2015 in Wenling, China. The collapse of the shoe factory in Folong Village, Wenling City collapsed killed at least 12 people. Photo by ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images
Rescuers carry an injured person from a collapsed factory building on July 4, 2015 in Wenling, China. The collapse of the shoe factory in Folong Village, Wenling City collapsed killed at least 12 people. Photo by ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images
Rescuers carry an injured person from a collapsed factory building on July 4, 2015 in Wenling, China. The collapse of the shoe factory in Folong Village, Wenling City collapsed killed at least 12 peop

China building collapse kills 12


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BEIJING // Twelve people died after a shoe factory collapsed in eastern China, as more than 40 people escaped, state media reported on Sunday.

More than 50 workers were in the building in the city of Wenling in Zhejiang province when it came down on Saturday afternoon, state-run China Central Television (CCTV) and the official Xinhua news agency reported.

Rescuers pulled 42 people from the rubble and sent them to a hospital, where nine of them died, the Wenling city government said on its microblog. Two more bodies were pulled from the wreckage on Sunday.

The cause of the collapse was being investigated.

“There was no premonition,” the media quoted worker Yang Zhongkun as saying. “I heard a ‘bang’ and saw the building collapse.”

Mr Yang added that water flowed down from a large fishing pool on the roof of the building, while other employees said leaking water was reported before the building gave way, Xinhua reported.

A total of 53 fire trucks, 302 rescuers and five rescue dogs responded to the collapse, the report said.

Photos circulating on Chinese social media showed a man being carried on a stretcher by police officers, while rescuers and other personnel stood on top of the rubble.

Building collapses and other industrial accidents are not uncommon in China, where many structures and facilities are old, safety procedures can be lax and rebuilding has not kept up with the country’s remarkable economic growth.

China’s top safety watchdog in May blamed poor construction and weak safety standards for a fire at a nursing home that left 38 people dead.

In April, almost 30,000 people were evacuated after a fire broke out in a Chinese chemical plant which blazed for nearly 50 hours before the flames were finally extinguished.

And in November, a fire at a coal mine in northeastern China killed 26 workers, in one of the country’s most highly accident-prone industries.

* Agence France-Presse and Associated Press