At least 17 people were killed
when a rubbish mound collapsed in a poor district of Mozambique's
capital Maputo, crushing several nearby homes, emergency services said.
Torrential rain is thought to have
caused the loose waste to shift and crash down on the shacks, trapping
the occupants who were sleeping at the time of the incident on Sunday
night.
Mozambique's emergency service warned
there could be more victims, trapped under the vast waste pile which is
located in the Hulene district of the capital.
"The information we received from
local authorities is that the number of people living in those houses
exceeds the number of deaths recorded, so work is still ongoing to see
if there are any other deaths," said spokesman Leonilde Pelembe.
The rubbish mound destroyed five homes and rescue teams were still searching through the wreckage to find survivors, he added.
"I live in this neighbourhood because I
have nowhere to go. Had the government told me to go to another place
to live, I would have left here," said local resident Maria Huo.
Her family home was partially destroyed and her son injured in the landslide, she said.
"It's been more than 10 years that the
dump should have been closed because it's full -- but they still
continue to pile trash on the trash. The consequence is this," said
Teresa Mangue, a neighbourhood leader.
Heavy rain has been falling on Maputo since Sunday causing damaging homes and deluging roads and schools.
AFP
Photo credit: AJ+ (Twitter)
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