Indian workers have pulled four more bodies from the rubble of a collapsed apartment block, taking the death toll to 25 five days after the disaster, an official said.
The bodies were discovered throughout the day as searchers sifted through tonnes of debris from the building, which crumbled at mid-afternoon on Saturday.
"The operation is still on and we expect a few more bodies to be trapped inside which will be pulled out," Ashok Menon, director of fire and emergency services in the western state of Goa, told AFP.
The accident is the latest in a string of deadly building collapses in India, some of which have highlighted shoddy construction standards.
The five-storey building, which was under construction, crumbled while more than 40 poorly paid daily-wage labourers were on site at the coastal village of Canacona, south of the state capital Panaji.
Some 16 people were recovering in hospital after escaping the collapse.
The chances of finding survivors are slim, officials have said.
Searchers have been using bulldozers, shovels and bare hands to try to shift concrete slabs and other debris. Witnesses said the smell of decomposing bodies was thick in the air.
Goan police are searching for the builder and the contractor who have gone missing since the tragedy. They and others involved in the building's construction have been charged over the accident.
In September a rundown residential block in the financial hub Mumbai collapsed, killing 60 people. Another building collapse in the city in April killed 74.
Huge demand for housing in India and pervasive corruption often result in cost-cutting and a lack of safety inspections.
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