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Afghanistan landslide leaves thousands missing in remote village Afghanistan mudslides: hundreds feared dead
(about 3 hours later)
A landslide triggered by heavy rains buried a village in north-eastern Afghanistan on Friday, leaving as many as 2,000 people missing, a senior Afghan official said. Hundreds of people were buried alive in a remote northern corner of Afghanistan on Friday when a mudslide swept through a village and a second collapse then trapped neighbours who had rushed to help, according to local officials.
Shah Waliullah Adeeb, governor of Badakhshan province, said thousands were missing after a hill collapsed on the village of Hobo Barik. Adeeb said the landslide buried 300 homes in the area about a third of all houses there. Thousands of tons of soil and rocks broke off from a hill in Badakhshan district near the Tajik border, creating a wave of mud that destroyed everything in its path.
The governor said rescue crews were working but didn't have enough equipment and appealed for shovels. "It's physically impossible right now," he said. "We don't have enough shovels; we need more machinery." He added that authorities evacuated a nearby village over concerns about further landslides. "There are around 1,000 houses in Aab Barik, 300 were buried when this happened, then 600 local people who live in the site went to help but unfortunately the hill collapsed a second time," said provincial governor Shah Waliullah Adib.
Faziluddin Hayar, the police chief in Badakhshan province, said the landslide happened about 1pm Friday. He visited the site with the provincial police chief and, after inspecting the wreckage and speaking to villagers who were spared, they estimated that more than 2,500 people had been trapped. The scale of the devastation meant there was little hope of finding survivors, or even recovering bodies, he said.
Badakshan province, which is nestled in the Hindu Kush and Pamir mountain ranges and bordering China, is one of the most remote in the country. "The mud is 10 to 30 metres deep, we couldn't even reach the bodies, so we decided to just pray for them and make the site into a mass grave."
Badakhshan is poor and fairly isolated, and although the landslide hit not far from the provincial capital, it was in a dangerous area with patchy communication links and a heavy insurgent presence.
If the governor's estimate of the toll is confirmed, it would make the landslide the country's deadliest natural disaster since 1998, when two earthquakes each killed several thousand people.
A member of parliament from the province, Mohammad Zakria Sauda, said there were more than a thousand people dead, including many women and children, and confirmed that a large portion of the dead was rescuers swept away in a second landslide.
"At first a small part of the hill came down, and then when people went to help the other big part came down. Casualties could be as many as 1,000 people. Children, women are stuck under the soil."
The US president, Barack Obama, sent a message of condolence. "On behalf of the American people, our thoughts are with the people of Afghanistan, who have experienced an awful tragedy," he said.
Officials said it was too early to discuss what caused the landslide, although it came after weeks of heavy rain at a time when snow melt from the mountains is already swelling streams and rivers.
Serious flooding last week killed hundreds and displaced thousands more, and many in Badakhshan were aware of landslide risks. The previous day, a smaller landslide in the area damaged 50 houses, but no one was killed.
President Hamid Karzai ordered emergency relief work to start immediately, and Nato forces said they were ready to help the Afghan government with search and rescue if needed.
The United Nations confirmed that hundreds had been killed and said it was helping search for survivors and provide food and shelter.
"The number of deceased has increased to 350 and significant displacement is expected," the UN said in a statement. "The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs is helping with coordinating local authorities to rescue those still trapped... Road access to affected area is secondary, but good. [It] cannot take heavy machinery."
Afghans living in the rugged mountains of northern Afghanistan are used to avalanches and mudslides. An avalanche in 2010 at the 3,800 metre high Salang pass killed over 170 people, most buried in their cars and buses as they snaked through the mountains in heavy snowfall.