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Dozens still missing as Guatemala landslides kill 22

Taishi Ci

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset

Dozens still missing as Guatemala landslides kill 22


By Sarah Grainger
GUATEMALA CITY | Sun Sep 5, 2010 6:54pm EDT

GUATEMALA CITY (Reuters) - A massive landslide buried a crowd trying to dig out a bus from deep m&d on Sunday, killing at least 22 people with dozens more feared dead, as torrential rains battered Guatemala. Emergency workers recovered 22 bodies from the landslide on a major highway northwest of the capital, and they warned it could take two days to dig out all the victims.

"A wall of earth fell on a bus and around 100 local people organized themselves to dig out the victims," said fire department spokesman Sergio Vasquez. "Then another landslide came along and buried them." Workers suspended rescue operations at the site after heavy rain struck the region again, sending people fleeing from the rain-saturated hillsides.

In a separate incident, 12 people were killed on Saturday when a bus was buried in a landslide. Six more people were killed in other incidents on Saturday, raising the weekend death toll to at least 40. "It's a national tragedy," President Alvaro Colom told a news conference, adding that nearly 12,000 people had been evacuated to emergency shelters.

"It's painful that poor people are paying the price of natural disasters." Photographs of the bus wrecked on Saturday showed its roof crushed by a huge pile of earth and rock that almost completely covered the vehicle. More than 30 separate landslides cut the Inter-American Highway, one of Guatemala's main roads, within a single 30-mile (50-km) stretch, local media reported.

Emergency services officials warned further rain was expected on Sunday and Monday. Colom appealed to people to stay off the nation's highways due to the threat of further landslides and said rescue efforts would be suspended if more rain fell in the affected areas. More than 150 people died in Guatemala in May when Tropical Storm Agatha drenched Central America, triggering landslides.

Record amounts of rain have fallen in parts of Guatemala and southeastern Mexico this year. Thousands of people in the Mexican Gulf of Mexico state of Tabasco have been forced from their homes by flooding. Water levels behind some dams in the region have risen so high that floodgates have been opened.

(Reporting by Sarah Grainger; Writing by Robert Campbell, Editing by Eric Beech)


 

Taishi Ci

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset

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People carry a landslide victim in La Cumbre de Alaska September 5, 2010.


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Rescue workers carry a landslide victim on a stretcher in La Cumbre de Alaska September 5, 2010.


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The bodies of landslide victims are covered in blankets and placed on tables during a wake
in the village of Parrasquin in Nahuala of September 5, 2010.



 

Taishi Ci

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset

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Rescue workers remove a landslide victim in La Cumbre de Alaska September 5, 2010.


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Rescuers carry a body from a bus buried in a landslide on the Inter-American highway, 80 km (50 miles) outside of the Guatemalan capital Tecpan, September 4, 2010.


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People cross a flooded street on a makeshift balsa in Villahermosa, Tabasco state, Mexico, September 4, 2010.


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Rescuers carry a body from a bus buried in a landslide on the Inter-American highway, 80 km (50 miles) outside of the Guatemalan capital Tecpan, September 4, 2010.


 
C

Cao Pi

Guest

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Relatives cry at the site where a bus was buried in a landslide on the Inter-American highway, 80 km (50 miles)
outside of the Guatemalan capital Tecpan, September 4, 2010.



 
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