PNG landslide rescue continues as 670 villagers feared buried under 8m of dirt

Staff writers
Reuters
Locals gather at the site of a landslide at Mulitaka village in the region of Maip Mulitaka, in Papua New Guinea's Enga Province on May 26, 2024. More than 670 people are believed dead after a massive landslide in Papua New Guinea, a UN official told AFP on May 26 as aid workers and villagers braved perilous conditions in their desperate search for survivors. (Photo by AFP)
Locals gather at the site of a landslide at Mulitaka village in the region of Maip Mulitaka, in Papua New Guinea's Enga Province on May 26, 2024. More than 670 people are believed dead after a massive landslide in Papua New Guinea, a UN official told AFP on May 26 as aid workers and villagers braved perilous conditions in their desperate search for survivors. (Photo by AFP) Credit: STR/AFP

Emergency crews in Papua New Guinea are continuing their rescue efforts to find survivors after more than 670 people were feared killed in a massive landslide which flattened a remote village in the Pacific nation’s northern region.

The United Nations migration agency on Sunday said some 1250 people had been displaced from the landslide that occurred in Papua New Guinea’s Enga province early morning on Friday.

More than 150 houses were buried and around 250 houses nearby have been abandoned by inhabitants.

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“The houses are buried under around eight metres of dirt. So there is quite a lot of debris to get through,” aid group CARE International PNG country director Justine McMahon told ABC television on Monday.

McMahon said dangerous conditions and unstable land were hampering rescue efforts. An estimated 4000 people were living near the impacted area, she said.

Residents have rescued a couple, who had been trapped under the rubble, after they heard their cry for help, media reported.

The International Organisation for Migration said earlier on Sunday that only five bodies had been retrieved from the rubble.

“People are coming to terms with the fact that the people under the debris are now all but lost,” IOM said in an earlier status update by email.

Social media footage posted by villagers and local media teams showed people scaling rocks, with many digging with shovels, sticks and their bare hands to find survivors. Women could be heard weeping in the background in videos.

Emergency crews, including the PNG defence engineering team, were on the ground but heavy equipment required for the rescue had yet to reach the village as the main road remains cut off and the only access was via helicopter.

Neighbour Australia and France, which rules the Pacific island of nearby New Caledonia, have said they stand ready to assist PNG.

More than six villages have been impacted by the landslide in the province’s Mulitaka region, about 600km from the capital Port Moresby, Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said.

There has been no official counts on the deaths though the UN migration agency on Sunday estimated more than 670 people may have died, more than double the initial number of possible fatalities reported by the PNG media.

The UN said only six bodies had been retrieved from the rubble so far.

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