PNG: Rainfall and Denuding Forests Cause Deadly Landslides
As with other recent landslides in PNG, high-intensity rainfall event amid denudational processes, geological structure and the anthropogenic activity in the vicinity of the landslide could all have affected slope stability. The emerging extractions and urbanization patterns in developing countries has made them the site of the greatest—but often most-under-reported—material and human losses. Predicting and preventing landslides are keys to saving human lives.
UN says survivors `unlikely` in Papua New Guinea landslide, thousands more evacuated
Authorities in the country say some 2,000 people are feared dead from a landslide on May 24.
It is now "very unlikely" that more victims of a deadly landslide in Papua New Guinea will be found alive, a UN official told Agence France-Presse (AFP) on Tuesday, May 28. "It is not a rescue mission, it is a recovery mission," UNICEF Papua New Guinea`s Niels Kraaier said. "It is very unlikely they will have survived."
Papua New Guinea says some 2,000 people are feared buried in a landslide that destroyed a remote highland community in the early hours of May 24. With rescue and relief efforts hampered by the remote location, a severed road link, heavy rainfall and nearby tribal violence, Enga provincial administrator Sandis Tsaka warned the disaster could yet worsen. About 7,900 people from remote villages are being evacuated, with the ground around the landslide still moving.
"The tragedy is still active," Tsaka said. "Every hour you can hear rock breaking – it is like a bomb or gunshot and the rocks keep falling down." "This was an area heavily populated with homes, businesses, churches and schools, it has been completely wiped out. It is the surface of the moon – it is just rocks," said Tsaka.
UN Development Programme official Nicholas Booth said many people had refused to evacuate, holding out hope their loved ones would be found. The immediate focus was the delivery of aid and clearing up the affected area, he told AFP.
In the long term, geological surveys would be needed to determine how many people would need to be permanently relocated, Booth said. "This landslide has blocked the road westward, so not only are there challenges in accessing the village itself, but it does mean the communities beyond that are also cut off."
The isolated communities, with as many as 30,000 people, had enough supplies for the coming weeks, but the situation could worsen in the coming months, he said.
Police and defense forces aim to reach the site on Tuesday and cordon off the most dangerous areas, officials said. Aid agencies are also trying to get in food, clean water, health supplies and education resources.
Photo on front page: People gather at the site of a massive landslide in the village of Kaokalam, Papua New Guinea, Source: STR/AFP. Photo on this page: Aerial view taken on 27 May 2024 showing a general view of the area affected by a landslide in Yambali village in the region of Maip Mulitaka, in Enga Province, Papua New Guinea. Source: Emmanuel Eralia / AFP.
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Papua New Guinea faces `dramatic situation` as 2,000 feared buried alive under landslide