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Morocco building collapse kills 22 during newborn celebration
One of the four-storey buildings was home to eight families, the authorities said.
At least 22 people are dead and more than a dozen injured after a double building collapse in Morocco. The disaster in Fez unfolded while one building was hosting an Aqiqah, a traditional Muslim celebration marking the birth of a child. This building was home to eight families, the local authorities said, while the other was unoccupied. A survivor, who lost his wife and three children in the overnight collapse, told a local TV station that rescuers had only been able to retrieve one body. Another survivor, interviewed by SNRT News, Morocco`s national broadcaster, said: "My son who lives upstairs told me the building is coming down." She added: "When we went out, we saw the building collapsing." Witnesses said the buildings had shown signs of cracking for some time, when interviewed at the scene by SRNT. Both buildings, in the Al-Mustaqbal neighbourhood, were four-storeys high. Announcing an investigation, the Fez prosecutor said 16 people had also been injured, citing preliminary figures. Some 38,800 buildings across the country are classified as being at risk of collapse, according to Adib Ben Ibrahim, housing secretary of state. The latest collapse is one of the worst in Morocco since a minaret fell in the historic northern city of Meknes, killing 41 people in 2010. Fez, a former Moroccan capital, is the country`s third most-populous city, as well as one of its oldest, dating back to the eighth century. But deteriorating living conditions, and poor public services, sparked a wave of anti-government protests there, and in other cities, two months ago.
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