Massive landslides triggered by torrential rain yesterday crashed down onto three villages in the central hills of Sri Lanka, and more than 200 families were missing and feared buried under the mud and debris, the Sri Lankan Red Cross said.
Sixteen bodies have already been recovered and about 180 people have been rescued from the enormous piles of mud unleashed at about 5pm on Tuesday, military spokesman Brigadier Jayanath Jayaweera said.
Villagers recalled hearing and seeing the torrents of muddy water, tree branches and debris crashing down around their homes.
“I heard a huge sound like a plane crashing into the earth,” said 52-year-old A.G. Kamala, who had just returned to her house in Siripura village when the landslides hit. “I opened my door. I could not believe my eyes, as I saw something like a huge fireball rolling down the mountain and again a huge sound.”
More than 300 troops were joined by local residents digging through the mud with their hands, sticks and shovels to search for survivors in the farming villages of Siripura, Pallebage and Elagipitya in Kegalle District, about 72km north of Colombo, Jayaweera said.
Heavy fog and continuing rain, along with electricity outages and the instability of the ground, were complicating rescue efforts.
About 220 families were reported missing, the Sri Lankan Red Cross said in a statement. Officials could not give the village populations, but such villages typically include about 1,000 to 1,500 residents.
As anxious family members waited for news about missing loved ones, officials said the full extent of the tragedy was still unclear.
One woman, 70-year-old A.G. Alice, said all nine of her children were unaccounted for.
“I don’t know what happened to me after” the landslides hit with “a thundering sound I have never heard in my life,” she said.
A man said his wife, mother-in-law, son and daughter-in-law were all in his house in Siripura when the landslides hit.
“I still can’t locate my family,” M.W. Dharmadasa said. “I still don’t know what happened to them.”
State broadcaster Rupavahini showed images of huge mounds of earth covering houses, while cascades of muddy water gushed from the hilltops above. Villagers said 66 houses had been buried or damaged, local journalist Saman Bandara said.
More than 1,000 people who escaped the disaster were sheltering and being treated for minor injuries at a nearby school and a Buddhist temple, government official Mahendra Jagath said.
The same rain that unleashed the mudslides has also caused severe flooding in cities, including Colombo, where tens of thousands of homes were inundated.
Sri Lanka’s disaster management center had reported 11 deaths from lightning strikes and smaller landslides elsewhere.
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