Rain has caused delays in recovery operations as overnight rainstorms forced rescuers to suspend work for several hours, and more rain today morning caused a brief delay. By afternoon, crews were back at work as they continued looking for bodies.
Major Moazzem Hossain, who is leading the army rescue team, said the recovered bodies were decomposed and beyond recognition. Search teams were trying to identify the victims with their identity cards.
Hundreds of bodies are still trapped under the debris of the illegally constructed Rana Plaza as many continue to remain missing, local media reported.
It is still unclear how many people were in the building here in the suburbs of the capital Dhaka on April 24 when the structure, housing five garment factories, collapsed, a day after a huge crack was spotted by authorities.
Rana illegally added three floors and allowed the factories to install generators, police said.
Some of the survivors of the collapse alleged that the factory owners had forced them to work despite appearance of the crack on the building the day before it collapsed.
Meanwhile, nineteen-year-old garment worker Reshma, the last to be pulled out alive after she spent 17 days under the rubble, continued her recovery. Doctors said she was recovering at a military hospital and was out of danger.
A typical Bangladeshi garment worker takes home less than USD 40 a month. Their minimum wage was last raised -- by 80 percent -- in November 2010.
Last week, Bangladesh closed down 18 garment factories temporarily as part of its efforts to allay fears of international buyers and rights groups over safety and labour standards in the country's beleaguered apparel sector.
