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New Delhi, March 29 : The building collapse in northeast   Delhi Saturday that killed seven people could have been avoided if the builder   had acted after being warned that the structure had developed cracks and was   leaning dangerously on just three pillars. According to Mohammed Jumman, a labourer who survived the   disaster at the low-income Bhrampuri area, said he and fellow workers had   repeatedly warned builder Dheeraj Garg about its possible collapse but he   overruled them.
 "On Friday morning, our supervisor Aalam also warned   Dheeraj bhaiya that the building could crash. But Dheereaj ignored our warnings   and asked us to finish the rest of the construction," said Jumman,   25.
 
 "Whenever we complained about the structure, he would tell us to fill   the cracks with marble and cement, saying nothing would happen."
 
 Jumman,   who suffered minor injuries on the head, spoke to IANS from his bed at the Guru   Tegh Bahadur (GTB) Hospital.
 
 A native of Bihar, Jumman was working on the   top floor of the four-storey building when it came crashing down due to what the   police said was the use of substandard material and poor construction   design.
 
 He said he was buried under heaps of concrete and managed to   crawl out through a small hole. He managed to pull out three of his colleagues -   Mohammed Irshad, 50, Mohammed Imran, 25, and Mumtaz, 32.
 
 But they were   declared brought dead by doctors at the Guru Tegh Bahadur Hospital (GTB). At   least seven people, including two children, were killed and 20 injured in the   tragedy.
 
 Mohammed Ikram, 24, another labourer who survived with head   injuries, blamed Garg for the faulty designing. "Do you think a four-floor   building could ever survive on three pillars?" Ikram asked.
 
 "The base was   weak. Walls on the ground floor were not meant to hold the pressure of three   more storeys. The heavy flooring of the three upper storeys added to the burden   on the ground floor walls and the three pillars that the entire building stood   on," Ikram said, holding his bruised head.
 
 The atmosphere at the GTB   hospital ward where the injured were treated was charged with grief as more   wounded workers were brought in.
 
 Mohammed Feroze wiped his tears as he   blamed Garg's lust for money for the death of his brother-in-law Mumtaz,   widowing his sister. "Where will my sister and her nieces go now?" asked Feroze.   Mumtaz was the family's breadwinner.
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