
As the City Hall confirmed 62 deaths in the 30-story State Auditorium in Bangkok, destruction workers should descend to the building’s second floor on Monday.
Workers were digging into the dust on Sunday at the top of 2.57 meters above the fell building, according to Suriyachai Rawiwan, director of disaster prevention for the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration. They should approach the second floor on Monday, one month after the tower collapsed during the 7.7-magnitude earthquake in Myanmar on March 28.
More excavators with jackhammers will be used, according to the chairman, because the concrete slabs at the base of the dust were strong.  ,
On Saturday, workers discovered a second body at what was possibly the fifth or sixth floor of the building. Additionally, they discovered five human body parts. The director anticipated that employees would discover more corpses in the basement of the fell structure.
City Hall confirmed 62 incidents, 32 missing, and nine injured persons at the decline site on Sunday. Over 250 animal components had been identified by investigative officers.
According to deputy government official Karom Polponklang, the Thai government has so far provided about 38 million bass in compensation for the victims of the March 28 disaster.
He claimed payment was given to the families of more than 50 victims across the country, including more than 40 fatalities at the State Audit Office building that had collapsed.
Payment for common injury is onlycapped at 65, 000 ringgit per case. The financial support is up to 1 million baht per event for serious injuries.
Until their treatment is finished, those who seek treatment at or are referred to state-run facilities will have their remedy expenses covered by the condition.
According to Mr. Karom, there was also payment for people who were denied paid sick time and disability.  ,