More than 100 people believed killed by a landslide in Papua New Guinea, Australian media report
UNB
Publish: 24 May 2024, 09:23 PM
MELBOURNE,
Australia, May 24 (AP/UNB) - More than 100 people are believed to have been
killed Friday in a landslide that buried a village in a remote part of Papua
New Guinea, Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported.
The landslide reportedly
hit Kaokalam village in Enga province, about 600 kilometers (370 miles)
northwest of the South Pacific island nation's capital of Port Moresby, at
roughly 3 a.m. local time (15:00 GMT), ABC reported.
Residents say current
estimates of the death toll are above 100, although authorities have not
confirmed this figure. Villagers said the number of people killed could be much
higher.
Videos on social media
show locals pulling out bodies buried under rocks and trees.
The Papua New Guinea
government and police did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Elizabeth Laruma, who
runs a women's business association in Porgera, a town in the same province
near the Porgera Gold Mine, said village houses were flattened when the side of
a mountain gave way.
"It has occurred
when people were still asleep in the early hours, and the entire village has
gone down," Laruma told ABC. "From what I can presume, it's about
100-plus people who are buried beneath the ground."
The landslide blocked
the road between Porgera and the village, she said, raising concerns about the
town's own supply of fuel and goods.
Village resident Ninga
Role, who was away when the landslide struck, expects at least four of his
relatives have died.
"There are some
huge stones and plants, trees. The buildings collapsed," Role said.
"These things are making it hard to find the bodies fast."
Belinda Kora, a Port
Moresby-based ABC reporter, said authorities had yet to make any official
comment more than 12 hours after the disaster.
Kora said helicopter was
the only way of accessing the village which is in the mountainous interior
region known as the Highlands with the main road closed.
Papua New Guinea is a
diverse, developing nation of mostly subsistence farmers with 800 languages.
There are few roads outside the larger cites.
With 10 million people,
it is also the most populous South Pacific nation after Australia, which is
home to some 27 million.
Telecommunications are
poor, particularly outside Port Moresby where government data shows 56% of the
nation's social media users reside. Only 1.66 million people across the country
use the internet and 85% of the population live in rural areas.
