Mexican authorities: 8 dead, 100 missing in slidesRescuers were flying in from Mexico City and emergency personnel have been sent
The Associated Press
MEXICO CITY — A disaster official says at least eight people are dead and 100 are missing in two mudslides in the southern state of Oaxaca.
Oaxaca state Civil Protection operations coordinator Luis Marin Castillejos says an avalanche in the community of Santa Maria Tlahuitolpetec has killed at least seven people, while at least another 100 are missing.
The state's governor earlier said as many as 1,000 could be buried there.
Castillejos said Tuesday another slide in the community of Villa Hidalgo killed at least one person.
"We were all sleeping and all I heard was a loud noise and when I left the house I saw that the hill had fallen," said Donato Vargas, an official in Santa Maria de Tlahuitoltepec reached by a satellite telephone.
He said he called the Mexican army and state officials for help.
"It has been difficult informing authorities because the road are very bad and there isn't a good signal for our phone," Vargas said shortly before the call dropped.
Ruiz said the landslide followed days of rain in the Sierra de Juarez region.
Rescuers were flying in from Mexico City and emergency personnel have been sent to the town about 50 miles (80 kilometers) east of Oaxaca city and 130 miles (220 kilometers) from Mexico City.
"There has been lots of rain, rivers have overflowed and we're having a hard time reaching the area because there are landslides on the roads," he said.
Luis Marin, an official with Oaxaca state's civil protection department, said rescue crews had yet to reach the area.
The federal Interior Department issued a statement that rescue workers from the army, navy and federal police were being flown to the area with rescue dogs and heavy machinery.
The landslide in Oaxaca follows weeks of heavy rains that have caused havoc in southern Mexico and Central America.
Huge swaths of riverside communities in southern Mexico were still under water Tuesday — flooding exacerbated by the passage of Hurricane Karl and Tropical Storm Matthew. At least 15 deaths in Mexico were blamed on the hurricane.
In Honduras, authorities said four people, including a child, drowned in rivers and creeks swollen by Tropical Storm Matthew.
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