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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Indian army teams scour landslide site for remaining dead

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Army teams pushed deeper Friday into Indian tea plantations and villages struck by landslides that killed more than 200 people, working on the assumption that nobody was left alive to rescue.


The number of fatal floods and landslides in India has increased in recent years and experts say climate change is exacerbating the problem.


Days of torrential monsoon rains battered the southern coastal state of Kerala before twin landslides struck before dawn on Tuesday, with more than 500 soldiers among the rescue crews. Military engineers laid a temporary bridge to speed up search efforts after earlier relying on jury-rigged ziplines to transport recovered bodies over raging waters.


"The assumption is that there is nobody left to be rescued," a statement issued late Thursday by the Kerala state government said. Around 8,000 people were sheltering at emergency camps around the disaster site in Wayanad district.


State health minister Veena George said relief workers in the camps were counseling traumatised survivors and cremating dead animals to prevent disease outbreaks.


George told AFP on Friday that 199 bodies had been recovered. But the final toll is certain to be higher, with rescuers reporting the gruesome discovery of more than 100 body parts in flood waters or buried in the muddy earth.


Wayanad is famed for the tea estates that crisscross its hilly countryside and which rely on a large pool of laborers for planting and harvest.


Many of the victims were workers and their families, who lived in brick-walled row houses that were inundated by a powerful wall of brown sludge as their occupants slept.


Uprooted trees and rocks were strewn about one abandoned village in front of overturned vehicles and partially collapsed homes. Monsoon rains across the region from June to September offer respite from the summer heat and are crucial to replenishing water supplies.


They are vital for agriculture -- and therefore the livelihoods of millions of farmers and food security for South Asia's nearly two billion people.


But they also bring regular destruction in the form of flash floods and landslides. At least 572 millimeters (22.5 inches) of rain fell in Wayanad in the two days before the landslides, according to state government figures. Damming, deforestation and development projects in India have also exacerbated the human toll. India's worst landslide in recent decades was in 1998, when rockfalls triggered by heavy monsoon rains killed at least 220 people and buried the tiny Himalayan village of Malpa.


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