The Arizona Republic

MORE THAN 100 FEARED BURIED IN CHINESE LANDSLIDE

Some villagers escape debris hitting homes after heavy rains

- Doug Stanglin

@dstanglin USA TODAY

More than 100 villagers were feared buried Saturday in a massive landslide triggered by heavy rain in Sichuan province in southweste­rn China, according to local officials and the Chinese media.

Fifteen bodies had been found by late Saturday, the China Global Television Network reported. It said 118 people in the village of Xinmo in Mao County were missing and 62 homes had been buried by huge boulders and a mass of earthen debris.

The Sichuan Daily said rescuers made contact with a villager buried under the rubble who answered her cellphone when they called and burst into tears. The woman was in her bedroom when the landslide hit the village, and rescuers were trying to reach her, the report said.

The paper said a family of three, including a month-old baby, managed to escape just as the landslide hit about 6 a.m.

Qiao Dashuai told state broadcaste­r CCTV that the baby saved the family because he was woken up by the child’s crying and was going to change the baby’s diaper when he heard a noise that alerted him to the landslide.

“We heard a strange noise at the back of our house, and it was rather loud,” Qiao said. “Wind was coming into the room, so I wanted to close the door. When we came out, water flow swept us away instantly.” He said they struggled against the flood of water until they met medical workers who took them to a hospital. Qiao said his parents and other relatives had not been found.

Wang Yongbo, a local rescue official, told CCTV that some 105 million cubic feet of earth and rock had slid down the mountain, the Associated Press reported. The mass of earth and rocks covered almost a mile of road and blocked over a mile-long section of a river.

Almost 2,000 firefighte­rs, medical staff and armed police officers were rushed to the scene, CGNT reported, but meteorolog­ists said the rescue effort could be hampered by the prospect of three more days of rain.

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Saturday ordered all-out rescue efforts for anyone trapped in the rubble, the state-owned Xinhua news agency reported.

 ?? ZHENG LEI ZHENG LEI, EPA ?? Rescuers work at the site of a massive landslide that hit early Saturday in southwest China’s Sichuan province.
ZHENG LEI ZHENG LEI, EPA Rescuers work at the site of a massive landslide that hit early Saturday in southwest China’s Sichuan province.

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