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Sri Lankan troops search for 100 missing after landslides

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Sri Lankan troops were digging through tonnes of mud Thursday to search for more than 100 people reported missing after landslides buried two villages, claiming at least 24 lives.

The government vowed to dig "as long as it takes" but hopes were fading of finding survivors in the landslides that hit a mountainous area late Tuesday after days of heavy rains that triggered flooding.

"We are not giving up," Disaster Management Minister Anura Yapa told reporters in the capital Colombo. "We still consider this a rescue operation and we will dig as long as it takes," he said.

However the minister said nobody had been pulled alive from the landslides since soon after they struck the villages in the tea-growing district of Kegalle, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) northeast of Colombo.

A Sri Lankan man carries a television through floodwaters from a home in the Kelaniya suburb of Colo...
A Sri Lankan man carries a television through floodwaters from a home in the Kelaniya suburb of Colombo on May 19, 2016
Ishara S.Kodikara, AFP

He said about 100 people have since been reported missing, although local police said they have received information of 134 missing from one village alone.

More bodies were recovered on Thursday from one of the destroyed villages, taking the total number killed so far in the landslides to 24.

"We have found seven bodies at Bulathkohupitiya today," a police officer at the scene told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The recoveries came as Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera appealed for international help after the torrential rains brought flooding to many parts of the island.

Samaraweera said the rains were the heaviest recorded in 24 years and official figures show 300,000 people have been forced to flee to state-run relief camps.

A Sri Lankan woman waits at a relief camp following a landslide in the village of Aranayake in the c...
A Sri Lankan woman waits at a relief camp following a landslide in the village of Aranayake in the centre of the country on May 19, 2016
Lakruwan Wanniarachchi, AFP

"The situation is largely under control now, but we still need a lot of assistance," he told reporters in Colombo. "What we need urgently is water purification tablets, water pumps and things like that."

At least 45 people have died on the island in weather-related disasters since the weekend, officials have said.

- 'River of mud'-

Sheltering at a Buddhist temple in Kegalle, devastated housewife Piyawathi said her son and 10-year-old grandson were killed in the landslides after they swept through his house.

Troops carry out relief and rescue efforts following a landslide in the village of Aranayake in cent...
Troops carry out relief and rescue efforts following a landslide in the village of Aranayake in central Sri Lanka, on May 19, 2016
Lakruwan Wanniarachchi, AFP

"My son's house has simply disappeared," Piyawathi, whose uses one name, told AFP at the Viyan Eliya temple where she and around 350 others sought refuge.

In the second village, farmer Nihal Edirisinghe, 35, described fleeing his home at the foot of a hill with his family after hearing a "massive sound like an aircraft".

"The entire area was covered in mist," Edirisinghe told AFP. "On Tuesday evening we heard a massive sound like an aircraft at close range. Then I saw the stream next to my house had turned into a river of mud."

He said he returned on Thursday to discover his house was still intact, unlike 34 others in the village that had been swallowed by tonnes of mud.

The death toll from landslides in Sri Lanka has risen to 24
The death toll from landslides in Sri Lanka has risen to 24
Chandan Perera, Sri Lankan President's Office/AFP

President Maithripala Sirisena urged authorities to speed up rescue and relief operations after travelling to the area on Wednesday.

"The loss is devastating," he tweeted after his visit.

Authorities have warned there could be further landslides, although the rains were easing across the island.

"We have issued more landslide warnings and have asked residents in vulnerable areas to be vigilant," said Disaster Management Centre spokesman Pradeep Kodippili.

The meteorological department said the heavy rains were caused by a depression in the Bay of Bengal, ahead of the arrival of the southwest monsoon.

Sri Lankan troops were digging through tonnes of mud Thursday to search for more than 100 people reported missing after landslides buried two villages, claiming at least 24 lives.

The government vowed to dig “as long as it takes” but hopes were fading of finding survivors in the landslides that hit a mountainous area late Tuesday after days of heavy rains that triggered flooding.

“We are not giving up,” Disaster Management Minister Anura Yapa told reporters in the capital Colombo. “We still consider this a rescue operation and we will dig as long as it takes,” he said.

However the minister said nobody had been pulled alive from the landslides since soon after they struck the villages in the tea-growing district of Kegalle, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) northeast of Colombo.

A Sri Lankan man carries a television through floodwaters from a home in the Kelaniya suburb of Colo...

A Sri Lankan man carries a television through floodwaters from a home in the Kelaniya suburb of Colombo on May 19, 2016
Ishara S.Kodikara, AFP

He said about 100 people have since been reported missing, although local police said they have received information of 134 missing from one village alone.

More bodies were recovered on Thursday from one of the destroyed villages, taking the total number killed so far in the landslides to 24.

“We have found seven bodies at Bulathkohupitiya today,” a police officer at the scene told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The recoveries came as Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera appealed for international help after the torrential rains brought flooding to many parts of the island.

Samaraweera said the rains were the heaviest recorded in 24 years and official figures show 300,000 people have been forced to flee to state-run relief camps.

A Sri Lankan woman waits at a relief camp following a landslide in the village of Aranayake in the c...

A Sri Lankan woman waits at a relief camp following a landslide in the village of Aranayake in the centre of the country on May 19, 2016
Lakruwan Wanniarachchi, AFP

“The situation is largely under control now, but we still need a lot of assistance,” he told reporters in Colombo. “What we need urgently is water purification tablets, water pumps and things like that.”

At least 45 people have died on the island in weather-related disasters since the weekend, officials have said.

– ‘River of mud’-

Sheltering at a Buddhist temple in Kegalle, devastated housewife Piyawathi said her son and 10-year-old grandson were killed in the landslides after they swept through his house.

Troops carry out relief and rescue efforts following a landslide in the village of Aranayake in cent...

Troops carry out relief and rescue efforts following a landslide in the village of Aranayake in central Sri Lanka, on May 19, 2016
Lakruwan Wanniarachchi, AFP

“My son’s house has simply disappeared,” Piyawathi, whose uses one name, told AFP at the Viyan Eliya temple where she and around 350 others sought refuge.

In the second village, farmer Nihal Edirisinghe, 35, described fleeing his home at the foot of a hill with his family after hearing a “massive sound like an aircraft”.

“The entire area was covered in mist,” Edirisinghe told AFP. “On Tuesday evening we heard a massive sound like an aircraft at close range. Then I saw the stream next to my house had turned into a river of mud.”

He said he returned on Thursday to discover his house was still intact, unlike 34 others in the village that had been swallowed by tonnes of mud.

The death toll from landslides in Sri Lanka has risen to 24

The death toll from landslides in Sri Lanka has risen to 24
Chandan Perera, Sri Lankan President's Office/AFP

President Maithripala Sirisena urged authorities to speed up rescue and relief operations after travelling to the area on Wednesday.

“The loss is devastating,” he tweeted after his visit.

Authorities have warned there could be further landslides, although the rains were easing across the island.

“We have issued more landslide warnings and have asked residents in vulnerable areas to be vigilant,” said Disaster Management Centre spokesman Pradeep Kodippili.

The meteorological department said the heavy rains were caused by a depression in the Bay of Bengal, ahead of the arrival of the southwest monsoon.

AFP
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