"Rescue operations have been called off. The death toll at present stands at 72 while 62 people have been pulled out alive," Thane Joint Commissioner of Police Vipin Kumar told reporters at the scene of the tragedy, the worst of its kind in Maharashtra.
According to the Regional Disaster Management Control (RDMC) sources, those dead include 22 women and 17 children.
Of the 60 injured, 36 have been admitted to hospitals in Thane, Kalwa and Mumbra. The seriously injured have been shifted to JJ and Sion Hospitals in Mumbai.
Kumar said now an adjoining multi-storey structure, also constructed by the same builder illegally, was in the process of being pulled down.
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R A Rajeev, Thane Municipal Commissioner, had yesterday gone on record to say that 90 per cent of buildings in Mumbra area where Shil Phata, the scene of Thursday's tragedy is located, are illegal.
Alok Awasthi, Commandant of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), which was rushed from Pune soon after the collapse, too confirmed that rescue efforts had been abandoned as there was no likelihood of presence of any bodies or survivors.
Describing the operation as "complicated", Awasthi said because it was a "sandwich collapse", with floor lying over floor, it was a daunting task to remove debris from each storey to look for survivors.
"We had to proceed very slowly as any mis-step would have pushed up the death toll," he said.
The Government had yesterday suspended Thane Deputy Municipal Commissioner Deepak Chavan and Shil-Daighar Senior Police Inspector K P Naik for dereliction of duty and for allegedly colluding with the builders.