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Papua New Guinea landslide death toll exceeds 670, says UN agency
The estimated death toll from a massive landslide in Papua New Guinea has grown to more than 670, according to the International Organization for Migration.
Serhan Aktoprak, the chief of the UN migration agency’s mission in the South Pacific island nation, said the revised death toll was based on calculations by Yambali village and Enga provincial officials that more than 150 homes had been buried by Friday’s landslide. A previous estimate had been 60 homes.
“They are estimating that more than 670 people [are] under the soil at the moment,” Aktoprak told the Associated Press.
Local officials had initially put the death toll on Friday at 100 or more. Only five bodies and a leg of a sixth victim had been recovered by Sunday.
Emergency responders in Papua New Guinea were moving survivors to safer ground on Sunday as tons of unstable earth was threateneing the rescue effort, along with tribal warfare, which is rife in the country’s highlands.
The island’s government is considering whether it needs to officially request more international support.
Crews have given up hope of finding survivors under earth and rubble 6-8 metres (20-26ft) deep, Aktoprak said. “People are coming to terms with this so there is a serious level of grieving and mourning,” he said.
Government authorities were establishing evacuation centres on safer ground on either side of the massive swath of debris covering an area the size of three to four football fields that has cut across the main highway through the province.
“Working across the debris is very dangerous and the land is still sliding,” Aktoprak said.
Beside the blocked highway, convoys that have transported food, water and other essential supplies since Saturday to the devastated village 35 miles (60km) from Wabag, the capital of Enga province, have faced risks related to tribal fighting in Tambitanis village, halfway along the route. Papua New Guinea soldiers were providing security for the convoys.
Eight people were killed in a clash between two rival clans on Saturday in a longstanding dispute unrelated to the landslide. About 30 homes and five retail businesses were burned down in the fighting, officials said.
Aktoprak said he did not expect tribal combatants would target the convoys but noted that opportunistic criminals might take advantage of the mayhem.
“This could basically end up in carjacking or robbery,” Aktoprak said. “There is not only concern for the safety and security of the personnel, but also the goods because they may use this chaos as a means to steal.”
Longtime tribal warfare has cast doubt on the official estimate that almost 4,000 people were living in the village when a side of Mount Mungalo fell away.
Justine McMahon, the country director of the humanitarian agency Care International, said moving survivors to more stable ground was an immediate priority along with providing them with food, water and shelter. The military was leading those efforts.
The numbers of injured and missing were still being assessed on Sunday. Seven people, including one child, had received medical treatment by Saturday, but officials had no details on their conditions.
Medical facilities were buried along with houses, small businesses, a guest house, school and petrol station, officials said.
McMahon said there were other health facilities in the region, the provincial government was sending health workers and the World Health Organization was mobilising staff.
“There will be some support, but it’s such a spread-out area that I think it will be quite a challenging situation,” McMahon said. “The scale of this disaster is quite immense.”
While Papua New Guinea is in the tropics, the village is 2,000 metres (6,600ft) above sea level where temperatures are substantially cooler.
The Papua New Guinea defence minister, Billy Joseph, and the government’s national disaster centre director, Laso Mana, were flying from the capital, Port Moresby, by helicopter to Wabag on Sunday to see what was needed.
Aktoprak expected the government would decide by Tuesday whether it would officially request more international help.
The US and Australia, a near neighbour and Papua New Guinea’s most generous provider of foreign aid, are among governments that have publicly stated their readiness to do more to help responders.
Papua New Guinea is a diverse, developing nation with 800 languages and 10 million people, who are mostly subsistence farmers.