Talking to reporters at the state Secretariat here, Minister of State for Home (Rural) Deepak Kesarkar today said the site where sand dredging has been on in Savitri river is far away from the collapsed bridge.
In a letter written to Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis today, noted environmentalist Sumaira Abdulali of Awaaz Foundation had stated that illegal sand mining in the river led to the weakening of the foundation of the bridge and resulted in the mishap.
"But small trees and plants that had grown on the upper portion of the bridge, could have weakened it and it might have caved in by the gushing water," the minister added.
He also said it was possible that the buses and other vehicles could have been stuck in the pits created by sand dredging.
Kesarkar added that as per the demands made by the kin of missing persons, the government would continue to use helicopters in the search operation for the next couple of days.
Meanwhile, talking to reporters in Mahad after visiting the location, Shiv Sena minister Ramdas Kadam sought to know whether the structural audit of the ill-fated bridge was done at the site or by sitting in government offices.
The state Environment Minister admitted it was the "failure" of the government and said he would not spare the guilty officers.
In the letter, Awaaz Foundation has alleged that the Savitri river is one of the many areas that is being misused to dredge massive quantities of sand.
Though the sand mining sites are not near the ill-fated bridge, they pose serious threat to the structural stability of the bridges, Abdulali said.
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