[VIDEO] Woman found alive six days after Huruma building collapse

A woman is rescued from the rubble of a six-storey building that collapsed in Nairobi, Kenya, May 5, 2016. REUTERS
A woman is rescued from the rubble of a six-storey building that collapsed in Nairobi, Kenya, May 5, 2016. REUTERS

Rescue workers were racing on Thursday to dig out a woman found alive under the rubble of a building in

Kenya's capital six days after it collapsed, a senior official at the site said.

The woman, who was receiving oxygen and had been connected to an intravenous drip by doctors, had survived in a pocket of broken masonry since the building crumbled on Friday night.

"She cannot move but she is safe," Kenya National Disaster Operation Centre manager

Pius Masai told reporters after the woman was located.

He said she had spoken to doctors on site.

Rescue workers were working with their hands and power tools to reach her.

Nairobi Governor Evans Kidero reported via Facebook on Thursday that the woman had

not been identified.

"The team of doctors looking after her, led by Nairobi Health executive Bernard Muia will ensure she is rushed to hospital for further medical checks," he said.

The death toll from the collapse of the building has reached 36, Masai said.

But only seven of

the bodies have been identified; the exercise has been slowed down by the low turn-out of relatives.

Including the woman now being dug out, workers have rescued a total of 137 people.

Dozens are still listed as missing. But

Kenya

Red Cross officials have said it was not clear if those listed were caught in the collapse or had escaped but had not been traced.

Search and rescue operations are ongoing but teams complained of lack of sufficient materials and equipment.

Earlier this week rescuers said there was little chance of finding any more survivors, although a baby was pulled out of the wreckage on Tuesday, dehydrated but with no sign of other injuries. The baby was reunited with her father, but Masai said the baby's mother was confirmed among those killed.

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The building in Huruma collapsed last Friday night after days of heavy rain. The Interior ministry said the building had been built close to a river and earmarked for demolition, but local authorities had not acted on the order.

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Five suspects linked to the building

on Wednesday and were released on Sh1 million bond each.

Brothers Samuel Kamau and Henry Muiruri, Crispus Ndinyo, Justus Kathenge and Seline Ogallo were not charged. The brothers are the suspected owners of the building.

The collapse was the latest such disaster in a rapidly-expanding African city that is struggling to build homes fast enough. Several other buildings in Nairobi have crumbled in recent years, but without such a high death toll.

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