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700 reported missing in Bolivia
landslides
La Paz - Over 400 homes buried in the Andean
region of the South American country. Gold-mining operations may be
responsible for the disaster.
A major disaster happened Monday in
northwestern Bolivia. A mass of earth and rock broke away from the
Pucaloma Mountain and submerged a whole town in the landslide. The
area is located 250 kilometers north of the capital La Paz, in a
tropical area where landslides are common.
Local reports say that over 700
people are missing and more than 400 homes have been destroyed after
the catastrophe. However mining official Jose Plata told local radio
it was hard to estimate the number of casualties as the landslide had
submerged everything. "We have suffered a tragedy this morning,
the losses are impossible to calculate," he said.
Regional officials said the disaster
may have been caused by gold-mining operations that weakened a nearby
mountain. Mining officials also said that the landslide had buried
much of the local miners' equipment.
Several of the injured have been
taken to hospital in the nearby town of Tipuani. Authorities in La
Paz, said they were trying to get rescue workers to the scene of the
landslide but warned the process could take several hours, the
Associated Press news agency reported. -- Pravda
News
Brudirect.com
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