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World / Asia

Mudslides wipe out scores of Myanmar homes

Published: 13 Aug 2015 - 12:15 am | Last Updated: 07 Nov 2021 - 09:08 am
Peninsula

People drive through a flooded road near Dar Ka township of Ayeyarwaddy, Myanmar, yesterday.

 

YANGON: Myanmar was evacuating parts of a city yesterday after mudslides wiped away hundreds of houses and torrential rain threatened further damage in the worst floods to hit the country in decades. The government in Hakha, the capital of impoverished Chin state in northwest Myanmar, was moving nearly 4,000 people to safety after landslides caused by rains destroyed 375 houses, Chin Finance Minister Nan Zamon said.
At least 103 people have been killed and more than one million “critically affected” by the flooding, according to the government and the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. It is the worst natural disaster since Cyclone Nargis killed nearly 140,000 people in May 2008. Five out of six townships in Hakha, population 50,000, had been hit by landslides and another 900 houses were in danger of being damaged, Nan Zamon said.
“We are carrying out the evacuation now, giving priority to people from the houses that are completely damaged,” he said.
Hakha is 970 km (600 miles) to the northwest of Myanmar’s largest city, Yangon, and is the capital of one of the poorest and least-developed regions. The government has declared Chin and three other areas disaster zones and appealed for international help. At least a dozen countries have donated cash, with China dispatching a convoy of trucks with relief supplies, India and Australia flying in military aircraft to deliver supplies and the European Union and United States pledging funds for the relief effort.
Nan Zamon said another 3,000 people from nearby villages were also being moved to temporary shelters at government buildings and churches. 
REUTERS