More than 100 trapped in China landslide


Afp June 28, 2010

BEIJING: More than 100 people were buried or trapped in a landslide triggered by heavy rain in southwest China on Monday, a local official said, in the latest weather-related disaster to hit the nation.

State television showed rescuers searching through a huge mudslide and what appeared to be concrete rubble in the village of Dazhai in Guizhou province, and a reporter said workers had still not found any signs of life.

“One hundred and seven people from 37 families were trapped or buried,” an official in Guanling county emergencies office told AFP, adding that the number of casualties was not yet known.

“It’s raining hard, making the rescue work difficult,” said the official, surnamed Wang.

Villager Cen Chaoyang said he managed to escape from his house when he heard the landslide.

“I called for the others to flee, but it was too late. I saw some people behind me being buried,” he was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua news agency.

Premier Wen Jiabao asked rescuers to make an all-out effort to free people, and also to “prevent similar accidents happening in nearby areas, to protect people’s lives,” state radio reported.

Large swathes of eastern, central and southern China have been lashed by torrential rain for days. On Sunday, authorities said nearly 69 million people had been affected.

So far this month, at least 235 people have died and more than 100 others have gone missing in flooding and landslides triggered by heavy rains, according to China’s civil affairs ministry.

Around 4.7 million people have been forced to flee their homes over the past two weeks, the official China Daily said.

The National Meteorological Centre warned that the rain falling on Guizhou showed no sign of abating, with heavy to torrential downpours forecast on Tuesday.The centre also warned of a high probability that southwestern areas of the province would suffer more rain-triggered geological disasters, and asked residents to be on their guard.

The floods are among the worst in the southern part of the country since 1998, when more than 3,600 people were killed and over 20 million displaced, Xinhua said.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 29th, 2010.

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