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Many feared dead in massive Papua New Guinea landslide

A massive landslide is feared to have killed many after it struck six remote villages in Papua New Guinea, local officials and aid agencies said.

PAPUA NEW GUINEA: A massive landslide is feared to have killed many after it struck six remote villages in Papua New Guinea, local officials and aid agencies said.

The landslide buried more than 100 homes after it struck at around 03:00 local time Friday (17:00 GMT Thursday) in the highlands of Enga, north of the island nation in the south-west Pacific.

It was not immediately clear how many people were trapped in the rubble and no casualties have been officially confirmed.

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Enga governor Peter Ipatas told AFP news agency it was an “unprecedented natural disaster”. Papua New Guinea’s Prime Minister James Marape said his government has sent disaster officials to the landslide site to “start relief work, recovery of bodies, and reconstruction of infrastructure”.

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“I will release further information as I am fully briefed on the scale of destruction and loss of lives,” Mr Marape said in a statement. Images online show dozens of people climbing onto fallen boulders to survey the damage from the landslide.

Many houses appeared to have collapsed and trees uprooted. Rescuers are having a hard time sifting through the debris, reports say. People can be heard crying and yelling on a video posted by Facebook user Kindupan Kambii from Kaokalam village in Enga.