An approach ramp in Vietnam's southern Vinh Long province
leading to the Can Tho bridge, the longest bridge in the country's
southern Mekong Delta under construction, collapsed on Wednesday
morning, killing or leaving missing some 100 people.
An 87-meter section of the ramp, whose concrete was cast on
Tuesday, collapsed, killing at least 20 workers, and injuring over
100 others, according to sources from the People's Committee of
Vinh Long and hospitals in southern Can Tho city.
When the section collapsed, around 100 people were working under
the ramp, and some 150 others on the ramp. Those working under the
ramp faced high risk of fatality, while the people working on it
were injured, the sources said, noting the people are staff of a
partnership comprising three Japanese firms: Taisei, Kazima and
Nipponsteel.
According to initial investigation, the section, 30 meters above
the ground, collapsed after a scaffold system supporting the
section fell. According to a local construction engineer, the
collapse could have been caused by the fact that rain over the past
few days has affected the foundation.
Over 100 people have been hospitalized in Can Tho and Vinh Long.
Most of them suffered head, arm and leg injuries. Local agencies
are striving to search for people trapped in the section's ruins,
the sources said.
Construction of approach ramps and the cable-braced bridge's
main span over the Hau River, linking Can Tho and Vinh Long, began
in September 2004 with investment of over 4.8 trillion Vietnamese
dong (US$302 million) from official development assistance of Japan
and the Vietnamese government's reciprocal investment. It is
scheduled to be complete in 2008.
The six-lane bridge will be 2.7 km long, including the 550-meter
main span and approach ramps, and 24.9-meter wide. Approach roads
measuring over 12.6 km will bring the bridges total length to 15.4
km.
(Xinhua News Agency September 26, 2007)