• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Rescuers hunt for hundreds missing in deadly Guatemala landslide

Austin

Alfrescian
Loyal

Rescuers hunt for hundreds missing in deadly Guatemala landslide

AFP
October 4, 2015, 1:03 am

cf3979b89234cdcea59acdd00843ab38be510347-1b0tk79.jpg


Santa Catarina Pinula (Guatemala) (AFP) - Rescuers resumed a desperate search Saturday for several hundred people believed missing in a village landslide on the outskirts of Guatemala's capital, which left at least 30 dead.

At dawn, dozens of rescue workers, police, soldiers and volunteers with picks and shovels began clawing away at the debris left behind from the Thursday night disaster.

"We are removing debris to enter homes that are still under the m&d," firefighter Jose Hernandez, one of some thirty first responders on the scene Saturday, told AFP.

Nearby, several relatives of the missing checked in at a makeshift morgue set up next to the buried homes.

Families have reported receiving text messages from people they believed to still be trapped, more than 36 hours after the landslide struck the village of El Cambray II, in the municipality of Santa Catarina Pinula.

The affected area is about 15 kilometers (10 miles) east of the capital Guatemala City.

Authorities have said some 600 people are missing, and they expected the death toll to rise in the coming hours as the search resumes.

Their estimate is based on the 125 homes that Thursday's landslide destroyed or damaged after heavy rain.

"We have 29 dead people identified and one still unidentified," Sergio Cabanas, incident commander for the government's disaster reduction office CONRAD, told AFP Friday night.

The victims include at least three children.

Thirty-four people have been pulled out alive from the m&d and rubble, while 25 others were injured, CONRAD officials said.

The impact of the heavy rain was exacerbated by a nearby river, officials said. Municipal authorities had urged the community several times to relocate, most recently in November last year.

"The rescue job is very difficult because of the terrain -- it's practically as if it were a mountain," Cecilio Chacaj, a rescuer with a local firefighter unit, said Friday.

Soon after Chacaj spoke to AFP he pulled out a survivor from the debris.

More than 500 workers, as well as desperate residents, searched for survivors late into Friday evening before suspending the painstaking hunt for the night.

President Alejandro Maldonado said that several countries, including the United States and Cuba, had offered to help.

"We are a beautiful country but unfortunately we are vulnerable to this type of catastrophe," Maldonado told reporters.

Eight people had already died in previous weather-related events tied to Guatemala's rainy season, which lasts from May to November, according to government data.

Last year's rainy season was linked to 29 deaths and to damage to more than 9,000 homes.


 

Austin

Alfrescian
Loyal

Guatemala landslide 'leaves 600 missing'


AAP
October 3, 2015, 3:55 pm


More than 600 people are missing after a landslide on the outskirts of the Guatemalan capital, emergency officials say.

The confirmed death toll has risen to 26 but rescuers are continuing to find bodies in the landslide at the town of Santa Carina Pinula, and hundreds are feared dead.

"There are 600 people missing from 125 houses affected," said Alejandro Maldonado, director of the National Disaster Relief Agency.

The mudslide occurred late on Thursday after days of rain.

Witnesses said the steep hillside collapsed and buried the homes.

"There is a mountain of soil over the houses," Fire Department spokesman Raul Hernandez told radio station Emisoras Unidas.


 
Top