Landslides in India’s Kerala Kill 106 People
Landslides swept through tea estates and villages in southern India’s Kerala, killing at least 106 people while they slept as unexpected heavy rain collapsed hillsides and triggered torrents of mud, water and tumbling boulders.
The hillsides gave way after midnight following torrential rainfall in the Wayanad district of Kerala, a state known as one of India’s most popular tourist destinations. Most of the victims were tea estate workers and their families who lived in small houses or makeshift shelters.
Television images showed rescue workers scrambling through uprooted trees and flattened tin structures as boulders lay strewn across the hillsides and muddy water gushed through. Rescuers were being pulled across a stream, carrying stretchers and other equipment to rescue people.
At least 106 people were killed in the landslides, 128 injured and dozens unaccounted for, state authorities said. Local Asianet TV put the death toll higher at 119.
The landslides are the worst disaster in the state since 2018 when heavy floods killed almost 400 people.
More than 3,000 people had been moved out of the area and accommodated in 45 relief camps in the district, where hundreds of personnel, including army soldiers, using drones and sniffer dogs were searching for survivors.
Army engineers were deployed to help build a replacement bridge after the one that linked the affected area to the nearest town of Chooralmala was destroyed, the chief minister’s office said in a statement.
Although the area is a well known tourist destination, local residents were the most affected as all tourist excursions had been halted due to the rain.
The region was forecast to get 204 millimeters of rainfall but ended up getting 572 millimeters over a period of 48 hours.
More rains were forecast across the state for the next five days.