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Seven killed in West Sumatra landslide

A day after the landslide hit two adjacent houses in Padang Pariaman district on Wednesday, seven bodies were pulled out of the mud, while another person was rescued alive with broken bones. 

AFP
Padang, West Sumatra
Fri, October 1, 2021

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 Seven killed in West Sumatra landslide This handout picture taken and released on October 1, 2021 by the Indonesia National Board for Disaster Management (BNPB) shows a boy wading through floodwaters towards a community health centre in Pariaman, after torrential rain triggered floods and landslides in the area. (AFP/Handout)

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even people were killed in a landslide triggered by torrential storms in West Sumatra, authorities said, as they warned continuing rainfall could cause further ground movement on Friday.

A day after the landslide hit two adjacent houses in Padang Pariaman district on Wednesday, seven bodies were pulled out of the mud, while another person was rescued alive with broken bones. 

"All victims have been found after we were able to use heavy equipment yesterday afternoon," local disaster mitigation agency official Rumainur told AFP Friday.

Authorities warned residents to stay vigilant because heavy rains in the area will continue until Saturday. 

"Please beware of the danger of ground movement triggered by the rainfall," spokesman for National Disaster Mitigation Agency Abdul Muhari said in a Friday statement.

More than 300 houses and 80 hectares of rice field in Padang Pariaman have been inundated. 

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Strong winds also damaged houses, kiosks and vehicles, and knocked down trees.  

One person died and four others were injured when one fell on them as they were visiting a graveyard on Wednesday. 

Local authorities have announced a state of emergency for 14 days and opened public kitchens. 

In the West Sumatran provincial capital Padang, more than 400 people have been evacuated after heavy rain caused flooding in the city. 

Fatal landslides and flash floods are common across Indonesia during the rainy season, which started in September in Sumatra.

The disasters are often caused by deforestation and poor mitigation planning, according to environmentalists.

In April this year more than 200 people were killed in a cluster of far-eastern islands in Indonesia and neighbouring Timor Leste as Tropical Cyclone Seroja turned small communities into wastelands of mud and uprooted trees.

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