Thursday, October 4, 2012

18 students die after landslide hits China school


ASSOCIATED PRESS
BEIJING: Officials say all 18 elementary school students buried in a landslide in a mountainous part of southwestern China are dead, while one other person is missing.

The Yiliang county government said on its website that the children were declared dead early Friday about 18 hours after the landslide smothered the school and three farmhouses. It says the missing person was in one of the farmhouses when the landslide struck after 8 a.m. Thursday.

The government says the landslide blocked a river, and its water pooled around the buried buildings, hampering rescue efforts.

Officials have yet to give a cause for the landslide but the area has been lashed by rain and is prone to earthquakes. A series of quakes last month left 81 people dead.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

A landslide toppled an elementary school building in a mountainous area of southwestern China on Thursday, killing at
least 16 students and leaving three other people missing, a state news agency said.

Eighteen students were buried at the Tiantou Primary School and a 19th victim was buried in a house, the official Xinhua News Agency reported, citing local officials. Another person was seriously injured in the landslide, which occurred in an area ravaged by a deadly earthquake last month, it said.

About 2,000 local people, medics, police and military personnel were trying to rescue the victims, the Yiliang county government said on its website. Sixteen of the students were confirmed dead, Xinhua said.

The landslide hit the school and two farmhouses in Zhenhe village around 8 a.m., the county government said. More than 800 people living near a river blocked by the landslide were evacuated.

Rescuers rushed from the Yiliang county seat to Zhenhe three hours away to dig out the students, said Peng Hong, an official with the county foreign affairs office.

Peng said the cause of the landslide was not yet known, but Yiliang was struck by an earthquake last month that killed 81 people and devastated several villages. In addition, rain has lashed the region of mountains and sheer valleys.

Though Thursday was a holiday across China, students were in school to make up for days missed after the quake, Peng said.

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