An around-the-clock search of the sewer system has so far failed to find Vijaya Lakshmi Gali, a 48-year-old who vanished without a trace after plunging into an 8-metre-deep chasm following the sudden collapse of the pavement in the Masjid India area of the city. The incident, caught on CCTV cameras, has shocked Kuala Lumpur residents and raised questions over potential negligence after it was revealed that there was a soil slip at the exact spot last year, which was subsequently patched. Public patience is running thin with the road closures and business losses in a busy commercial area, a stone’s throw from the Petronas Towers, with some speculating that haphazard development linked to an urban renewal scheme dubbed the “River of Life” may have been the cause of the tragedy.

“You call it River of Life but someone has lost their life because of it,” Samy, whose Hindu prayer accessories stall is just metres away from the second sinkhole, told This Week in Asia. Launched by the federal government in 2011 in an echo of Seoul’s Cheonggyecheon’s stream restoration project, the rejuvenation of the historic old parts of Kuala Lumpur remains unfinished despite having spent over 3.9 billion ringgit (US$900 million).

01:19 Indian tourist vanishes after being swallowed by 8-metre sinkhole in Kuala Lumpur Pointing at the cordoned off hole near his stall, Samy said that people had noticed the subsidence forming since May and city hall had made efforts to patch it. “It’s .