Thursday, 30 October 2014

Heavy diggers in desperate hunt for Sri Lanka landslide victims


Rescue workers stepped up their desperate search Thursday for survivors of a landslide in Sri Lanka which is feared to have buried alive 100 people on a tea plantation, deploying heavy diggers to claw through the mud.

After rescuers, including soldiers, spent much of Wednesday using their bare hands to try and locate victims of the disaster in the eastern Koslanda district, military sources said five industrial excavators which are usually used to dig trenches were to join the search effort at first light.


Officials have already warned that the chances of finding survivors are slim with a senior government minister voicing fears that the death toll would reach three figures.

More than 300 survivors spent the night at two schools near the Meeriyabedda tea plantation which bore the full brunt of Wednesday's mudslide, triggered by heavy monsoon rains.

"What I gathered is that about 100 people have been buried alive," Disaster Management Minister Mahinda Amaraweera told AFP after visiting the site on Wednesday afternoon.
An earthmover clears debris caused by mudslide at the Koslanda tea plantation in Badulla district, about 220 kilometers (140 miles) east of Colombo, Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2014. The mudslide triggered by monsoon rains buried scores of workers' houses at the tea plantation, killing at least 10 people and leaving more than 250 missing, an official said. (AP Photo/Eranga Jayawardena)
Other officials said 16 people were confirmed dead while cautioning that the toll was likely to rise sharply.

There had been fears of an even higher toll when officials initially said that up to 300 people were unaccounted for, but the minister said most of those who were classified as missing were later found to be at work or in schools.

An office where village records were maintained was also destroyed in the disaster, causing problems for the authorities in compiling reliable casualty figures.

The minister said surrounding areas were unstable as a result of the heavy rains of the last few days and expected the recovery operation to proceed "cautiously".

One witness spoke of hearing a noise like thunder when part of a mountainside collapsed onto the estate, burying some of the workers' homes in 30 feet (nine metres) of mud and debris.

The Disaster Management Centre said they were issuing landslide warnings for several other areas in central Sri Lanka because of heavy monsoon rains and urged residents to move to safer locations.

Security forces deployed at least 500 troops to help with the search on Wednesday and the numbers were expected to rise Thursday with more reinforcements sent from nearby military camps.

Sections of several national highways have also been washed away by the rains and a train was stuck after a mountain slope crashed onto a railway line and disrupted services on the single track to the heart of the tea-growing central hills.

Sri Lanka, a tropical island at the foot of India, is prone to weather-related disasters -- especially during the monsoon season when the rains are often welcomed by farmers.

Thirteen people were killed in mudslides in and around Colombo in June.

Cyclonic winds that accompanied the monsoon in June last year killed 54 people, mostly fishermen.

Source:http://news.yahoo.com/

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