A massive landslide has struck Papua New Guinea’s highlands, local officials and aid roups said, with dozens believed to have been killed, reports aljazeera.com.
The disaster hit Kaokalam village in Papua New Guinea’s Enga province, about 600km (370 miles) northwest of the South Pacific island nation’s capital of Port Moresby, at about 3:00am local time on Friday (17:00 GMT Thursday).
According to reports from the Australian Broadcasting Corp (ABC) about 100 people are believed to have been killed, but authorities have not confirmed this figure.
“Authorities say the scale of the landslide is ‘massive’, but they still cannot confirm the death toll,” said Al Jazeera’s Jessica Washington, reporting from Jakarta in Indonesia.
She said authorities have assembled a team to assist in the aftermath of the disaster that affected a community of mostly subsistence farmers.
“Many homes have been destroyed as well as the gardens that people rely on to feed themselves in these communities,” our correspondent added.
Enga’s provincial governor Peter Ipatas told the AFP news agency that a big landslide had caused “loss of life and property”. He said at least six villages had been affected.
“It is a quite remote and quite hilly area where landslides are common,” Washington said, adding that “Papua New Guinea is susceptible to natural disasters, landslides, flooding, earthquakes.”
‘Houses got buried’
Images from the scene posted on social media showed a vast bite of rock and soil cleaved off from a densely vegetated hill. A long and wide scar of car-size boulders, felled trees and dirt stretched down towards the valley floor.
The remains of many corrugated tin shelters could be seen at the foot of a large landslide.
Dozens of local men and women scrambled over the piles of rock and soil, digging, crying out, listening for survivors or standing scanning the scene in disbelief.
Some became instant rescuers, pulling out bodies buried under rocks and trees.
“The landslide hit around three last night and it looks like more than 100 houses got buried. It is not yet known how many people were in those houses,” Vincent Pyati, president of the local Community Development Association, told AFP. “The number of victims is unknown.”
Elizabeth Laruma, who runs a women’s business association in Porgera, a town in the same province near the Porgera Gold Mine, told the ABC houses in Kaokalam village were flattened when the side of a mountain gave way. “From what I can presume, it’s about 100-plus people who are buried beneath the ground,” she said.
Media in the nation said the landslide may have impacted operations at the mine.
Aid agencies including the Papua New Guinea Red Cross and CARE said they had received confirmation of the landslide, and were working to find out more.
Sitting just south of the equator, the area gets frequent heavy rains. This year has seen intense rainfall and flooding. In March, at least 23 people were killed by a landslide in a nearby province.