The Freeman

Dozens buried, 3 dead in landslide in China

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Beijing, China — Dozens of people were buried and three confirmed killed when a landslide struck a remote and mountainou­s part of southweste­rn China on Monday.

The pre-dawn landslide buried 18 homes and sparked the evacuation of more than 200 people when it struck in Zhenxiong County, Yunnan province, state media said.

Three people are confirmed dead and rescuers have saved four, according to a report by state broadcaste­r CCTV just before 4:00 pm (0900 GMT).

Two hundred rescue workers have been dispatched as well as dozens of fire engines and other equipment, CCTV said.

One local told the state-run Beijing News outlet that she was asleep when the disaster hit and that parts of her ceiling had fallen onto her head.

“At the time I thought it was an earthquake, but later I knew it was the hillslope collapsing,” another resident told the outlet. Both were quoted under pseudonyms.

Footage shared on social media by a local broadcaste­r showed emergency workers in orange jumpsuits and helmets forming ranks outside a fire station as snowflakes whirled through the air.

Other images showed rescuers picking through towering piles of collapsed masonry in which a few personal belongings could be seen.

Chinese President Xi Jinping ordered “all-out” rescue efforts, CCTV reported.

Xi “demanded that rescue forces are organized quickly... and efforts made to reduce casualties as far as possible,” the broadcaste­r reported him as saying.

He added that it was “necessary to properly handle the work of comforting the families of the deceased and resettling affected people”.

CCTV broadcast an image it said showed a firefighte­r working to pull a trapped villager from inside a home affected by the disaster.

The local village head declined to speak about the landslide when contacted by phone, telling AFP he was “too busy.”

Landslides common

Landslides are common in Yunnan, a far-flung and largely impoverish­ed region of China where steep mountain ranges butt against the Himalayan plateau.

Monday’s disaster occurred in a rural area surrounded by towering peaks dusted with snow, state media footage showed.

Temperatur­es in Zhenxiong hovered at around minus four degrees Celsius (24.8 degrees Fahrenheit) on Monday morning, weather data showed.

There was no immediate official explanatio­n for what may have caused the landslide.

Efforts to establish what happened are underway, Xinhua reported.

China has experience­d a string of natural disasters in recent months, some following extreme weather events such as sudden, heavy downpours.

In September, rainstorms in the southern region of Guangxi triggered a mountain landslide that killed at least seven people, according to media reports.

Heavy rains sparked a similar disaster near the northern city of Xi’an in August, causing the deaths of more than 20 people.

And in June, a landslide in southweste­rn Sichuan province -- also remote and mountainou­s -- killed 19 people.

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