Kolkata warehouse collapse: Death toll climbs to 16, rescue ops on Day 3
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The death toll in the Taratala warehouse roof collapse in Kolkata has risen to 16, the Kolkata Police confirmed on Saturday, 27 June, as rescue operations stretched into their third consecutive day. The latest fatality was a worker who had been under treatment and succumbed to injuries overnight, taking the count from 15 to 16.
Rescue Operations on Day 3
A multi-agency rescue effort — involving the Indian Army, the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF), and the Railways — continued at the site on Saturday morning, though officials described the operation as being in its terminal stage. Advanced plasma-cutting and oxy-cutting machines have been deployed to slice through iron beams, while sniffer dogs and infrared victim locator cameras are being used to search for any survivors still trapped under the debris.
Notably, the absence of an attendance register at the site means authorities cannot determine with certainty how many workers may still be buried under the rubble — a significant complication for the ongoing search.
Condition of the Injured
14 workers remain under treatment at the state-run S.S.K.M. Medical College and Hospital in South Kolkata. According to hospital sources, the condition of at least a couple of the admitted patients is still critical.
What Caused the Collapse
A preliminary probe by the Special Investigation Team (SIT) of the Kolkata Police has identified a combination of two factors as the likely cause: the use of poor-quality construction material and a flawed casting pattern adopted during construction. The under-construction warehouse at Taratala, on the southern outskirts of Kolkata, collapsed on Wednesday, triggering the multi-day rescue effort.
Political Row and Police Complaint
The disaster has triggered a political flashpoint. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)'s Mazdoor Cell has filed a police complaint at Taratala Police Station against former Kolkata Municipal Corporation (KMC) Mayor and ex-municipal affairs and urban development minister Firhad Hakim, along with two All India Trinamool Congress (TMC) councillors — Anwar Khan and Shams Iqbal — in connection with the collapse.
This comes amid broader scrutiny of construction safety oversight in the city. The lack of any workers' register at the site raises serious questions about regulatory compliance and accountability for those managing the project.
What Happens Next
The SIT probe is ongoing, and further findings are expected as authorities sift through the debris and gather statements. With multiple patients still critical and the exact worker count unverified, the death toll could yet rise. Pressure is mounting on the West Bengal government to explain how an under-construction structure of this scale was operating without basic labour documentation.