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Indonesian landslide buries 18 villagers
by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) Dec 3, 2015


A landslide triggered by torrential rains Thursday engulfed a village in western Indonesia, burying 18 people, an official said.

Three have been found dead and rescuers are searching for the bodies of 15 others after the landslide hit the village of Lebong Tandai on Sumatra island, a hilly area known for gold mining.

Several houses were buried when mounds of earth and rocks surged down a hillside in the early hours, said disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho.

Efforts to recover the victims' bodies had been hampered by difficult access to the site, he said.

It came after a landslide killed two people and injured nine others on Sumatra earlier this week.

Landslides are common in Indonesia, one of the world's most natural-disaster prone nations, particularly during the months-long rainy season which began in recent weeks.


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Previous Report
WEATHER REPORT
UN study: Vast majority of world disasters caused by weather
Geneva, Switzerland (UPI) Nov 23, 2015
A new United Nations report aims to shine the light on the human and economic costs of weather-related disasters. Of the thousands of disasters nations have suffered over the last two decades, 90 percent have be weather-related. The majority have been caused by floods, storms, heatwaves and droughts. But the costs of these disasters, the study's authors point out, aren't well est ... read more


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