CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Rescue teams in South Africa forged ahead Monday with efforts to find any survivors still trapped under rubble a week after an apartment building that was under construction collapsed.
Their hopes were boosted over the weekend when one of the construction workers was found alive after six days without food and water.
Authorities said 26 construction workers who were on the site when the unfinished five-story building came down have been confirmed dead, while another 26 are missing, raising the possibility that the death toll could ultimately be above 50 in one of South Africa's deadliest building collapses.
More than 600 emergency services and other personnel have been involved in the search for survivors in the wreckage of the building in the city of George on South Africa's south coast, which collapsed last Monday.
There were 81 workers on the site when it collapsed, and 29 have been pulled out alive, the city said. It said 13 of them remained in a hospital without giving details of their condition. The city has previously said that many of the survivors were in critical condition when they were found.
The disaster management team overseeing the emergency response maintained that the operation was still rescue rather than recovery, pointing to the survivor pulled out on Saturday.
The man, who was identified as 32-year-old Gabriel Guambe, was in stable condition in the hospital and ''remarkably sustained only minor injuries,'' the city said. Guambe was trapped in the rubble for 118 hours, it said.
His survival underlined rescuers' hopes that there may be more people alive in what they called voids in the ruins of the building — areas where there are gaps between the concrete that might have allowed some workers to survive the collapse.