The accident late Saturday was India's second deadly building collapse in one day, after a dilapidated apartment block crumbled in the capital New Delhi, killing ten people including five children.
The partly-built tower, about 20 kilometres from Chennai in Tamil Nadu state, crushed mostly labourers at the site who had gone inside it to shelter from the rain.
Senior police officer Karuna Sagar told AFP that 11 bodies had been pulled from the wreckage as of Sunday afternoon while 20 people had been rescued and were being treated in hospital.
He said police had detained several people for questioning, including the builder and construction engineers.
Sagar said witnesses had described hearing a loud bang, with the building collapsing after around 50 workers went inside it to seek shelter.
He said dozens may still be trapped.
TV and still footage showed crowds of yellow-helmeted rescuers searching the ruins -- huge slabs of concrete which had pancaked onto each other, twisted steel reinforcing rods and tangled scaffolding.
Rescuers sifted through the debris with shovels as they searched for trapped survivors.
Dust-caked bodies of the dead and injured were carried out on stretchers as rescuers struggled to make their way through mounds of rubble.
A disaster management official leading the search called the operation a "big challenge" and said clearing the debris could take a few days.
"There is no clarity on the number of people trapped," S P Selvan, a senior officer from the National Disaster Response Force, told reporters in Chennai, according to the Press Trust of India.
Building collapses are common in India. Lax regulations and the demand for cheap housing mean contractors sometimes use substandard materials or add unauthorised extra floors.
In September last year, more than 50 people were crushed to death when a five-storey building collapsed in India's financial capital of Mumbai on the west coast.
"We will look into all aspects of planning permission and quality of construction, the structural aspect and the soil condition and see what's wrong," Sagar told the NDTV television station.
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa Jayaram announced compensation of INR 200,000 ($3,000) for the families of the dead and INR 50,000 for those injured.
COMMENTS (5)
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Nothing is going to happen to the owner of the building or the contractor, the poor will continue to suffer because the poor people can not fight their cases in the courts and the owners and contractor has no shortage of black money to pay the fees of prominent lawyers who charges upto Rupees one to five lakhs for one appearance.May those who departed rest in peace.
If the property owner had violated laws or regulations he should be severely punished to ensure deterrence for others.
Stricter Building codes are a must. Heavy penalty should be imposed in bribery or negligence where loss of life could be at risk. Lot of other factors come into play beside cement or it's ratio or curing time etc.
Rest in peace to all the innocent people who died and may the others heal quickly. Regardless of where we are from in the World, it is always a tragedy when innocent people are hurt or killed.
This happens in India on a daily basis. The poor construction practices and the building laws not enforced and implemented is the root cause. Need to enforce the laws properly.