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Guatemala ends search for landslide missing with toll at 280
by Staff Writers
Guatemala City (AFP) Oct 13, 2015


Landslide kills 17 in Myanmar: state media
Yangon (AFP) Oct 13, 2015 - A landslide triggered by torrential rains has killed at least 17 people in eastern Myanmar and forced the evacuation of scores more, state media said Tuesday.

The landslide hit a village in Hpa-saung township in the remote Kayah state on Monday afternoon, killing 10 men and seven women, the Global New Light of Myanmar reported.

More than 360 people areas have been relocated to temporary relief camps that have been opened at schools and a local hospital, with more heavy rain expected, it said.

Scores of people died in July when the worst flooding in years hit the country, affecting 1.6 million people nationwide.

Myanmar's annual monsoon rains provide a lifeline to farmers but can also prove deadly, with landslides and flash floods a common occurrence.

The recent floods have devastated vast swathes of land in the country's crucial rice bowl regions and raised concerns about reaching voters ahead of much-anticipated November 8 elections.

Guatemala called off a search Tuesday for dozens of people still missing in a landslide that killed at least 280 people, authorities said.

Around 70 people are unaccounted for, believed to be buried in the mud and rubble that wiped out a neighborhood in Santa Catarina Pinula, just outside of Guatemala City, on October 1.

"We've unanimously agreed to suspend the search and recovery efforts," Alejandro Maldonado, head of the country's disaster coordination agency Conred, told reporters.

The agency said 184 homes were damaged, with 73 of them seriously.

The government has announced plans to build a housing project nearby to relocate families displaced by the disaster, which left nearly 500 people living in temporary shelters.

Maldonado said municipal authorities will decide whether to declare the area destroyed by the landslide a cemetery.

Seven children among 13 killed in Pakistan landslide
Karachi (AFP) Oct 13, 2015 - Thirteen people including seven children were crushed to death in Karachi Tuesday when a rare landslide struck their thatch huts as they slept, officials said.

The victims, who police said were from three families, were living on a plot of land carved out of a hill in the eastern neighbourhood of Gulistane Jauhar when the tragedy struck in the early hours.

Tearful relatives gathered at the scene, watching as the bodies were pulled from the rubble and wrapped in shrouds. One victim was a girl believed to be as young as six months, a rescue worker told AFP.

"After up to five hours of rescue work the 13 bodies of the victims were recovered from the heap of stones and dust," senior police officer Javed Jaskani told AFP.

Rescue workers initially dug through the rubble with shovels and hoes in the hunt for survivors before switching to mechanical tools.

Jaskani said that a joint enquiry would be conducted by the police and the city administration to probe the cause of the tragedy, adding that no criminal elements were believed to be involved.


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Previous Report
WEATHER REPORT
Guatemala mudslide toll rises to 253 dead
Santa Catarina Pinula, Guatemala (AFP) Oct 9, 2015
The mounting toll from a mudslide that buried a Guatemalan community on October 1 has risen to 253 confirmed dead, authorities said Friday, with several hundred more unaccounted for. Search and rescue efforts will continue through the weekend, but on Monday officials will meet to decide how much longer to continue the operation, Deputy Public Health Minister Israel Lemus said. Eight day ... read more


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