15 Dead After Landslide In Southwest China Buries More Than 120 : The Two-Way : NPR

15 Dead After Landslide In Southwest China Buries More Than 120 : The Two-Way : NPR

 

More than 110 people remain missing after rescuers found 15 bodies among the debris of a landslide in the town of Xinmo in southwest China Saturday.
Local officials estimate more than 120 people and 62 homes were buried under tons of rubble.
The Chinese state news agency Xinhua reports 15 people are confirmed dead, as the now 3,000-strong rescue team, armed with "life-detection instruments and sniffer dogs," continue to search overnight.
Xinhua quoted the government of Sichuan province, where the town is located, as saying the identities of the 118 missing will be soon made public.
Rescuers had pulled out at least three people earlier Saturday, Xinhua reported.
"We won't give up as long as there is a slim of chance," said an unidentified rescuer, according to the news agency.
A family of three managed to escape the disaster after an infant in the home woke up crying half an hour before the landslide hit their house, the father, Qiao Dashuai, tells the news agency.
All 142 tourists visiting the site are alive, says Xu Zhiwen, executive deputy governor of the Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture of Aba, where the landslide struck.
The landslide fell from "a high part of a mountain" nearby, Xinhua reports.
"There are several tons of rock," police captain Chen Tiebo told the state television network CCTV, according to the BBC. "It's a seismic area here," he said.

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