- The death toll from a landslide in Malaysia has risen to 24.
- Nine people were still missing.
- According to officials, 90 people, most asleep, were camping at an unauthorised campsite when the landslide occurred.
Rescue workers scoured muddy terrain for survivors and bodies on Saturday as the death toll from a landslide at an unauthorised campsite in Malaysia rose to 24, including seven children, authorities said.
Nine people were still missing after a predawn landslide hit the site located at an organic farm near the town of Batang Kali just outside the capital Kuala Lumpur on Friday.
Selangor state fire and rescue director Norazam Khamis said the chances of finding survivors in the mud and debris a day after the disaster were “slim.”
Officials said there had been more than 90 people, most of them asleep, at the campsite near a mountain casino resort when the landslide struck.
Authorities said 61 people had been found safe or rescued.
Two of the victims were “believed to be a mother and her child in a state of embrace buried under the earth”, Norazam told reporters on Friday.
READ | Eight killed, dozens missing in Malaysia landslide
The farm did not have a licence to run a campsite and its operators would be punished if they were found to have broken the law, authorities said.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim visited the area late Friday and said financial aid would be given to the families of those killed or injured in the disaster.
Selangor state chief minister Amirudin Shari tweeted that all picnic and camping sites in the state would be closed for a week.
‘Unprecedented’
Landslides are common in Malaysia after heavy rains, which are regular at the end of the year.
However, no heavy rains were recorded in the area on the night of the disaster.
Nor Shahidah Mohd Nazer, a geology expert from the National University of Malaysia, described the landslide as “unprecedented” under the circumstances — involving a gentler slope and not following typical heavy rain.
She said the slope could have been partly affected by monsoon rain from days or even weeks ago.
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“Since the soil mass was initially wet and saturated, it behaved as a semi-liquid,” she told AFP.
In March, four people were killed after a massive landslide triggered by heavy rains buried their homes in a Kuala Lumpur suburb.
In one of the deadliest such incidents, a huge mudslide in 1993 brought on by heavy rain caused a 12-storey residential building outside the capital to collapse, killing 48 people.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by PostX News and is published from a syndicated feed.)