Morocco Tragedy: Death Toll Rises To 22 After 2 Adjacent Four-Storey Buildings Collapse In Fez - Video Surfaces
Two adjacent four-storey buildings collapsed overnight in Fez, Morocco, killing 22 and injuring 16. The neighborhood was evacuated, and rescue efforts continue. Built in 2006 under a slum eradication initiative, the collapse raises concerns about aging infrastructure and lax enforcement of building codes in rapidly growing Moroccan cities. An investigation is underway.

Morocco Tragedy: Death Toll Rises To 22 After 2 Adjacent Four-Storey Buildings Collapse In Fez - Video Surfaces | X @Kunal_Mechrules
Rabat (Morocco): Two adjacent four-storey buildings collapsed overnight in the Moroccan city of Fez, killing 22 people in the second fatal collapse there this year, authorities said on Wednesday.
Morocco's state news agency, MAP, reported that the two buildings housed eight families. Sixteen people were injured and taken to the hospital. Authorities said the neighbourhood has been evacuated and search and rescue efforts continued.
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It was unclear what caused the collapse or how many people were unaccounted for. Authorities said an investigation has been opened. MAP reported that the structures were built in 2006 during an initiative called "City Without Slums." Fez is Morocco's third-largest city and one of the hosts of this month's Africa Cup of Nations and the 2030 FIFA World Cup. It is best known for its walled city packed with medieval souks. It is also one of the country's poorest urban centres, where aging infrastructure is common.
Such building collapses are not uncommon in Moroccan cities undergoing rapid population growth. A collapse in May in Fez killed 10 people and injured seven in a building that had been slated for evacuation, according to Moroccan outlet Le360.
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Building codes are often not enforced in Morocco, especially in ancient cities where aging, multi-family homes of cinderblock are common. Though the buildings that collapsed Wednesday had been built according to code, the Hespress news outlet reported, additional floors had been added to the structures.
Infrastructure inequality was a focus of protests that swept the country earlier this year, with demonstrators criticising the government for investing in new stadiums instead of addressing inequality in health care, education and other public services.
(Except for the headline, this article has not been edited by FPJ's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)
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