Reuters
Beneath the mud
and rock that engulfed the small Guatemalan town of Santa Catarina
Pinula last week, search crews have found entire families who died
huddled together after they were buried alive.At
least 152 people were killed in Thursday's disaster just outside
Guatemala City, government officials said on Monday evening, and
emergency services chief Alejandro Maldonado said at least 300 people
were still unaccounted for.
The Guatemalan Red Cross made an appeal on Twitter for dry ice at its provisional morgue in the town.
The
mud that swallowed the El Cambray II neighborhood in Santa Catarina
Pinula, which lies at the bottom of a deep ravine, is so deep that
rescue workers are descending 39 feet (12 meters) through narrow shafts
to reach the roofs of homes.
"We've
found entire families," said Sergio Cabanas, an official at disaster
agency Conred. "We found almost all of them huddled together, which
means that they were going to try and evacuate but sadly they didn't
have time."
"Some died from the impact, some from asphyxiation and some ... from heart attacks," he added.
Rescue
efforts have been hampered by the precarious situation at the site,
said Cabanas. There were two smaller landslides on Monday. A nearby
river has risen by over 3 feet (one meter), and rescue workers fear for
the stability of the hillside where the landslide began.
So far, no
survivors have been found at the site, and rescue workers say the
chances of finding anyone alive under the 120,000 tonnes of earth that
buried the area are close to zero.
But search teams vowed to keep up the search.
"Our
determination to continue is firm. We're not going to stop until we
finish the job. The objective is that nobody is left buried at the
site," Maldonado told a press conference.
Guatemala's
government, which is in disarray after former President Otto Perez was
forced to resign and was arrested on corruption charges last month,
declared three days of mourning for those lost in the landslide.
It has vowed to relocate those still living in risky areas nearby to avoid a repeat disaster.
Source: Reuters
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