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60 dead or missing after landslide hits Papua New Guinea

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  • ASSOCIATED PRESS
    An aerial view shows a landslide that struck villages in the Southern Highlands mountainous region of central Papua New Guinea, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. Local media reported Wednesday that dozens of bodies have been recovered. (AP Photo/Post-Courier) PAPUA NEW GUINEA OUT
  • ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Villagers search the site of a landslide that struck villages in the Southern Highlands mountainous region of central Papua New Guinea, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. Local media reported Wednesday that dozens of bodies have been recovered. (AP Photo/Post-Courier) PAPUA NEW GUINEA OUT

PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea >> Rescuers were pulling bodies from the debris of a landslide that struck mountainous central Papua New Guinea, a disaster official said today. Local news media reported that as many as 60 people were dead or missing.

At least four bodies had been recovered, though the full extent of the damage to villages hit by Tuesday’s landslide was not immediately known, said Martin Mose, the director of the South Pacific island nation’s National Disaster Center.

"We are expecting more (bodies)," Mose said. "I am unwilling to put a number on that until I get confirmation from my team."

The National newspaper reported that 40 bodies had been recovered and 20 people were still missing following the landslide in the central town of Mendi.

The landslide carved a 1-mile trail of destruction across the remote landscape, Mose said, leaving roads to the villages cut off.

Photos from the Papua New Guinea Post-Courier showed scores of villagers searching a gigantic mound of dirt for survivors and victims.

Local lawmaker Francis Potape told Radio Australia’s indigenous language service that the landslide completely covered two villages while people slept.

"There are people buried underneath and a number of them are, from what I have heard, children," The National quoted Potape as saying.

Three National Disaster Center officials and a police specialist dog unit flew to Mendi today to join police at the disaster site.

Prime Minister Peter O’Neill also flew to the site to assess the damage today.

 

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