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Floor collapses at Jakarta stock exchange, reports say Floor collapses at stock exchange in Indonesia, injuring dozens
(about 2 hours later)
Images on social media show a mangled metal structure that has reportedly collapsed around a cafe near the entrance to the building Police say part of first floor gave way, sending debris crashing to ground level
Reuters Agence France-Presse in Jakarta
Mon 15 Jan 2018 06.02 GMT Mon 15 Jan 2018 08.11 GMT
First published on Mon 15 Jan 2018 06.02 GMT
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Dozens of people were seen running from the Indonesia Stock Exchange in central Jakarta on Monday, Metro TV showed, after unconfirmed reports of a collapsed structure, possibly a floor, inside the building. A floor at Indonesia’s stock exchange has collapsed into the building’s lobby, injuring at least 50 people.
The director of the stock exchange, Alpino Kianjaya, declined to comment on the incident. Markets are currently in midday break and will reopen at 1.30pm local time. Part of the floor on the first level gave way, sending a cascade of debris crashing on to the ground level, a Jakarta police spokesman said, adding that it was an accident and not an explosion. Victims were carried out on stretchers.
Breaking: reports a floor has collapsed at the Jakarta Stock exchange pic.twitter.com/KZlbfIOVyW The director of the Indonesian stock exchange, Tito Sulistio, said those injured had been sent to hospital. They had mostly sustained injuries to their legs and arms.
Images circulated on social media showed a mangled metal structure that had collapsed around a Starbucks cafe near the entrance to the multi-storey building. Figures given by spokespeople for three hospitals show 52 people were injured.
TV images showed some people sitting on the steps outside the building. “The accident happened at the first floor It’s a floor where many employees are passing by There are some victims but they have been taken to a nearby hospital,” the Jakarta police spokesman Argo Yuwono told reporters.
Jakarta police said they were seeking more information on the incident. Television footage showed several people lying on the ground and being carried outside the building, with crowds of panicked and screaming people being evacuated amid piles of debris.
More to come Despite the chaos, the stock exchange spokesman Rheza Andhika said trade had continued as usual in the afternoon session.
The accident happened shortly after noon local time (0500 GMT) while the market was on its lunchtime break.
“There was a lound banging so people who were inside immediately ran outside of the building,” said the Metro TV journalist Marlia Zein, who was on the scene.
The Indonesia stock exchange is in the centre of Jakarta, and the local office of the World Bank is also housed on the 12th floor of the complex, according to its website.
In 2000, powerful plastic explosives packed in the trunk of an old car caused a blast at the exchange building, leaving 15 people dead and several injured.
IndonesiaIndonesia
Asia PacificAsia Pacific
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