Landslides leave 41 dead in India’s Kerala state
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, INDIA—At least 41 people were killed and scores injured after landslides in the hills of India’s southern Kerala state, local media reported, with rescue operations obstructed after a main bridge collapsed in the region.
State health minister Veena George said that over 70 people were injured and the Indian Express reported that many people are likely to have been washed away in the Chaliyar river.
“The situation is serious. The government has pressed all agencies into rescue,” state forest minister AK Saseendran told Reuters after the landslides in the Wayanad district of the state.
More rain was predicted through the day.
The army was roped in to build a temporary bridge after a bridge in the district that linked the affected area, mostly tea and cardamom estates, to the nearest town of Chooralmala was destroyed, Saseendran added.
Stuck for hours
Local news channel Asianet TV said as many as 41 people died after the landslides caused havoc in the region.
Television visuals showed relief personnel making their way through rocks and uprooted trees as muddy water gushed through, with many houses destroyed.
One man was seen struggling to free himself after being stuck in chest-high mud for hours, as rescue workers were not able to reach him despite multiple efforts.
Rashid Padikkalparamban, a resident involved in the relief efforts, said there were at least three landslides in the area starting around midnight, which washed away the bridge connecting the affected area.
“Many people who were working in the estates and staying in makeshift tents inside are feared trapped or missing,” he said.
Relief efforts were ongoing on Tuesday, and two helicopters of the Indian Air Force have been mobilized, the Kerala chief minister’s office said in a statement.
Operations were hampered as the area was not reachable by road because of the bridge collapse, said Mohsen Shahedi of the National Disaster Response Force. —REUTERS
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