Colombia orders protection for mudslide town

The National Disaster Risk Management Unit said there were still more than 100 people missing and 4,500 homeless

Aerial view of the extensive damage caused by mudslides as a result of heavy rains, in Mocoa, Putumayo department, Colombia on April 3, 2017. PHOTO: AFP

BOGOTA:
Colombia's government on Sunday ordered measures to protect the stricken town of Mocoa from deforestation thought to have contributed to a deadly mudslide.

The March 31 torrent of earth killed 316 people including more than 100 children after three rivers flooded near the Amazon town, according to authorities.

102 children among 314 killed in Colombia mudslide


Environment Minister Luis Alberto Murillo announced that the at-risk area where the Mocoa tragedy occurred will be declared "a total protection zone, which means that from now on no (industrial) activity can be carried out there," a government statement said.

El Tiempo newspaper earlier quoted Murillo as saying in an interview that "there was deforestation for farming and livestock without observing the required environmental protections and reserves."

The National Disaster Risk Management Unit said there were still more than 100 people missing and 4,500 homeless after the disaster.
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