The story appears on

Page A12

July 31, 2014

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » World

17 killed, many feared buried, as landslide hits Indian village

TORRENTIAL rains triggered a massive landslide that buried a remote village in western India yesterday, killing at least 17 people as it swept away scores of houses and possibly trapping many more people under debris, officials said.

National rescue personnel reached the area before nightfall. But continuing rains and bad roads were hampering rescue efforts and preventing reinforcements from reaching Ambegaon, a village in Pune in Maharashtra state, said Alok Avasthy, a National Disaster Response Force commander.

Rescuers planned to work overnight using floodlights mounted on two jeeps from Pune along with earthmoving vehicles, according to Suresh Jadhav, a district official.

He said 17 bodies had been recovered from under mud, rocks, trees and other debris. “Everything on the mountain came down,” he said.

But with 70 homes buried and reports of another 158 hit by the landslide, rescuers anticipated more dead in the village, home to 704 people in the foothills of the Sahyadri Mountains.

The landslide hit early yesterday morning, but details of the damage only began to trickle out several hours later. The area received 10.8 centimeters of rain on Tuesday, with a heavy downpour continuing through yesterday.

A lack of Internet connectivity and poor cellphone service were also hampering the rescue operation.

“It’s surrounded by hills and the area is very remote and rural, so it’s taking us time to get there,” Avasthy said.

Some 250 disaster response personnel were in the area assisting local police and medical teams who began clearing the debris. At least 100 ambulances were also sent to the area, Jadhav said.

“It is a small village and this happened very suddenly,” local legislator Dilip Walse Patil told CNN-IBN TV network. Earlier yesterday, one local commissioner, Prabhakar Deshmukh, said more than 150 people could be trapped.

Landslides are common in the area during the monsoon season.

Pune is about 150 kilometers southeast of Mumbai. The nearest medical center is about 15 kilometers from the village.

The area around the village has been deforested, increasing its vulnerability to landslides.

 




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend