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91 remain missing as landslide buries buildings in Shenzhen

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A landslide hit an industrial park in Shenzhen city in South China's Guangdong province Sunday morning, crushing several buildings. [Photo/IC]
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SHENZHEN - A total of 91 people went missing after a landslide buried 33 buildings in an industrial park in Shenzhen city of South China's Guangdong province on Sunday, according to local authorities.

By 6 am Monday, 61 people remained missing, Shenzhen Evening News cited Shenzhen emergency officials as saying.

According to the official Weibo account of Ministry of Land and Resources, the landslide occured not due to natural causes but due to accumulation of huge pile of soil. The collapse happened at a dump site, which was used to pile up the soil and construction wastes. When the pile overloaded, it triggered the collapse of the building. Sina Weibo is China's Twitter-like social networking site.

The landside also caused the leakage of a nearby section of the West-East natural gas pipeline. The gas company has launched an emergency response, the gas in the damaged pipeline has been expelled and no explosion has happened, chinayouth.cn reported.

The missing include 36 male and 23 female, Yang Feng, an official with Shenzhen's emergency management office, told reporters on Sunday night.

Three people were injured in the disaster, according to officials from the rescue headquarters.

The headquarters said they have detected signs of life at three separate locations of the site.

Rescuers are battling unfavorable geological conditions to save those trapped under mud, after the landslide struck the Hengtaiyu industrial park at around 11:40 a.m., leaving more than 100,000 square meters of debris at the site.

The park is located in the Guangming New District in northwestern Shenzhen. A nearby section of the West-to-East natural gas pipeline exploded as the landslide hit the area.

"The site is quite narrow and is located on a ramp, so it is very difficult for vehicles to enter," said Ao Zhuoqian with Shenzhen's fire control department. "We have to go there on foot."

Rescue efforts are currently hampered by a spate of obstacles, including rain, low nighttime visibility and the large amount of mud, Ao said.

Rescuers work at the landslide site of an industrial park in Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong Province, Dec. 20, 2015.[Photo/Xinhua]
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"HUGE WAVES"

A video clip on microblog Sina Weibo shows powerful mud rocking the site with roaring sounds.

A resident living about four kilometers away from the site told Xinhua that he heard "a loud explosion" at around noon.

"It must be a big accident, as I could hear the sound from so far away."

An employee with the Liuxu Technology Co. in the park said power supply in the company suddenly went down at around noon.

"I saw red earth and mud running towards the company building," he said. "Fortunately, our building was not hit, and all people in our company were safely evacuated."

He said the landslide first crushed into a fish pond before burying buildings in the park, with water splashing up to three stories high.

"Without the pond's buffer, there would be more damage," he said.

Peng Jinxin, a local villager, said the large amount of mud came like "huge waves" when the landslide struck. Another villager said he narrowly escaped the disaster before ******** of mud engulfed his home.

"At one point the running mud was only ten meters away from me," he said.

The mud has covered an area of more than 60,000 square meters with an average thickness of 6 meters, according to geological experts at the site.

A landslide hit an industrial park in Shenzhen city in South China's Guangdong province Sunday morning, crushing several buildings. Photo by Chai Hua/chinadaily.com.cn
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RESCUE UNDERWAY

Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang have ordered immediate rescue efforts following the disaster.

Xi ordered Guangdong and Shenzhen authorities to do everything possible to minimize casualties, treat the injured and comfort the family members of the victims. He said scientific rescue efforts are needed to prevent further damages.

Li urged the ministry of land and resources and other central authorities to send officials to help the local government in its rescue efforts. He ordered investigations into the cause of the disaster.

The State Council, China's cabinet, has sent a working group to Shenzhen to help coordinate rescue efforts. Guangdong and Shenzhen officials are already at the site.

More than 1,500 people, including firemen, policemen and medical staff, are involved in the rescue operations, with more than 900 residents having been evacuated by 5 p.m.

A total of 104 fire engines, 123 life-detectors, 4 drones and 30 sniffer dogs have been employed in rescue work, according to the official Weibo account of the Fire Department under the Ministry of Public Security.
@Yizhi @Chinese-Dragon
 
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Shenzen is a good industrial city. My friend has been there. Hoping for the positive rescue news.
The reason is they put such a gigantic mud mountain only 1km from residential area and ignored the warning from the local environmental protection bureau, and no action was taken from the local government to clear this dangerous mud mountain. Some local officers will have a tough Chinese new year.
 
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The reason is they put such a big mud mountain only 1km from residential area and ignored the warning from the local environmental protection bureau, and no action was taken from the local government to clear this dangerous mud mountain. Some local officers will have a tough Chinese new year.

Punish those responsible for neglecting the warning
 
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Sincere condolences, speedy recovery to the region, and prayers and positive thoughts to the people affected.

God Bless and may His Angels comfort the afflicted....

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:(:(:(,what a tragdy!I dont think we should blame the weather or something else,the man-made moutain is dangerous for the people live around it.Did the factory leader really concern this potential problem?:pissed:
 
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The reason is they put such a gigantic mud mountain only 1km from residential area and ignored the warning from the local environmental protection bureau, and no action was taken from the local government to clear this dangerous mud mountain. Some local officers will have a tough Chinese new year.

I heard Shenzen industrial park is a concrete jungle. I hope tough action is taken against authorities
 
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Reinforcements arrive for Shenzhen rescue operation
Photo taken on Dec. 21, 2015 shows the landslide site of an industrial park in Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong Province. A total of 91 people remain missing as of early Monday morning, after a landslide buried or damaged 33 buildings in the industrial park in Shenzhen City on Sunday, according to local authorities.
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屏幕快照 2015-12-21 19.13.30.jpg
屏幕快照 2015-12-21 19.13.17.jpg


SHENZHEN, Dec. 21 (Xinhua) -- Seventy-eight excavators and 1,200 rescuers have been added to the operation searching for the 91 people missing after Sunday's landslide in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen.

There are now 2,906 rescuers digging through silt and rubble at the industrial park. The excavators, which arrived at the site on Monday morning, are the first to be involved in the operation.

Fifty-nine males and 32 females remained missing as of Monday morning after the disaster, caused by the collapse of a huge pile of construction waste.

The landslide covered 380,000 square meters in silt 10 meters deep, said Liu Qingsheng, deputy mayor of Shenzhen, at a press conference on Monday.

The 33 buildings buried include 14 factory buildings, two office buildings, one canteen, three dormitories and 13 low-rise buildings.

There are unlikely to be further landslides, said a team of 200 geology and gas experts involved in the rescue.

PetroChina, owner of China's major West-to-East natural gas pipeline that exploded as the landslide hit, said it has emptied the 400-meter-long ruptured pipe and is building a temporary replacement.

Two checkpoints have been established to register and verify information on the missing people

The 900 people evacuated after the landslide are staying in temporary settlements at a nearby sports center, community workstation and hospital.

"We are providing food and drinks, mattresses and quilts to meet people's basic needs," said Chen Jun, a volunteer at Guangming District Sports Center.

A medical station with 16 medics has also been set up near the landslide site, a doctor from Guangming New District Central Hospital told Xinhua.
 
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A landslide hit an industrial park in Shenzhen city in South China's Guangdong province Sunday morning, crushing several buildings. [Photo/IC]View attachment 280922

SHENZHEN - A total of 91 people went missing after a landslide buried 33 buildings in an industrial park in Shenzhen city of South China's Guangdong province on Sunday, according to local authorities.

By 6 am Monday, 61 people remained missing, Shenzhen Evening News cited Shenzhen emergency officials as saying.

According to the official Weibo account of Ministry of Land and Resources, the landslide occured not due to natural causes but due to accumulation of huge pile of soil. The collapse happened at a dump site, which was used to pile up the soil and construction wastes. When the pile overloaded, it triggered the collapse of the building. Sina Weibo is China's Twitter-like social networking site.

The landside also caused the leakage of a nearby section of the West-East natural gas pipeline. The gas company has launched an emergency response, the gas in the damaged pipeline has been expelled and no explosion has happened, chinayouth.cn reported.

The missing include 36 male and 23 female, Yang Feng, an official with Shenzhen's emergency management office, told reporters on Sunday night.

Three people were injured in the disaster, according to officials from the rescue headquarters.

The headquarters said they have detected signs of life at three separate locations of the site.

Rescuers are battling unfavorable geological conditions to save those trapped under mud, after the landslide struck the Hengtaiyu industrial park at around 11:40 a.m., leaving more than 100,000 square meters of debris at the site.

The park is located in the Guangming New District in northwestern Shenzhen. A nearby section of the West-to-East natural gas pipeline exploded as the landslide hit the area.

"The site is quite narrow and is located on a ramp, so it is very difficult for vehicles to enter," said Ao Zhuoqian with Shenzhen's fire control department. "We have to go there on foot."

Rescue efforts are currently hampered by a spate of obstacles, including rain, low nighttime visibility and the large amount of mud, Ao said.

Rescuers work at the landslide site of an industrial park in Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong Province, Dec. 20, 2015.[Photo/Xinhua]
View attachment 280924

"HUGE WAVES"

A video clip on microblog Sina Weibo shows powerful mud rocking the site with roaring sounds.

A resident living about four kilometers away from the site told Xinhua that he heard "a loud explosion" at around noon.

"It must be a big accident, as I could hear the sound from so far away."

An employee with the Liuxu Technology Co. in the park said power supply in the company suddenly went down at around noon.

"I saw red earth and mud running towards the company building," he said. "Fortunately, our building was not hit, and all people in our company were safely evacuated."

He said the landslide first crushed into a fish pond before burying buildings in the park, with water splashing up to three stories high.

"Without the pond's buffer, there would be more damage," he said.

Peng Jinxin, a local villager, said the large amount of mud came like "huge waves" when the landslide struck. Another villager said he narrowly escaped the disaster before ******** of mud engulfed his home.

"At one point the running mud was only ten meters away from me," he said.

The mud has covered an area of more than 60,000 square meters with an average thickness of 6 meters, according to geological experts at the site.

A landslide hit an industrial park in Shenzhen city in South China's Guangdong province Sunday morning, crushing several buildings. Photo by Chai Hua/chinadaily.com.cn
View attachment 280925

RESCUE UNDERWAY

Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang have ordered immediate rescue efforts following the disaster.

Xi ordered Guangdong and Shenzhen authorities to do everything possible to minimize casualties, treat the injured and comfort the family members of the victims. He said scientific rescue efforts are needed to prevent further damages.

Li urged the ministry of land and resources and other central authorities to send officials to help the local government in its rescue efforts. He ordered investigations into the cause of the disaster.

The State Council, China's cabinet, has sent a working group to Shenzhen to help coordinate rescue efforts. Guangdong and Shenzhen officials are already at the site.

More than 1,500 people, including firemen, policemen and medical staff, are involved in the rescue operations, with more than 900 residents having been evacuated by 5 p.m.

A total of 104 fire engines, 123 life-detectors, 4 drones and 30 sniffer dogs have been employed in rescue work, according to the official Weibo account of the Fire Department under the Ministry of Public Security.
@Yizhi @Chinese-Dragon

Prayers. Shenzhen today is the dream city for manufacturers, especially electronic hardware manufacturers.

I have a friend in Shenzhen studying in PKU Shenzhen.

I hope we can still find as many survivors as possible.
 
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First death confirmed as 76 remain missing
Rescue workers search for signals of life with detectors on the debris of a landslide site at an industrial park in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, Dec 22, 2015.[Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]
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Nearly 3,000 rescue workers were racing against time on Monday to search for dozens of people missing after Sunday's landslide at an industrial park in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.

At around 6 am Tuesday, the first body was recovered from the landslide site, Xinhua News Agency cited rescue headquarters as saying.

By 2:30 pm Tuesday, the number of missing in the disaster in Guangming New District was reduced to 76 from 81, including 50 males and 26 females, said Liu Qingsheng, deputy mayor of Shenzhen, at a press conference.

A name list of the missing was also released at the press conference.

Trucks and excavators were working at the scene, while many of those affected waited some distance away, hoping to return to their homes to retrieve some valuables if they had not been destroyed.

The industrial park has been sealed off, leaving the remaining factory buildings and shops almost empty, except for some firefighters and other rescue workers, who were resting after spending nearly the whole night on rescue work.

Liu Guonan, a geotechnical expert at the China Academy of Railway Sciences, said the landslide was the largest he had seen, adding, "The mud is deep, making it difficult for workers and vehicles to get through."

Rescue work was continuing at six sites simultaneously. Signs of survivors had been detected at one site, said Lai Xiaolian, deputy chief of the Shenzhen Firefighting Department Command.

Lai said the rescue work is very difficult because the disaster involves "more than a landslide", being a mix of mudflows, landslides and collapsed buildings.

Survivors have been settled in temporary shelters, including a gym, where more than 100 workers from a factory in the industrial park were housed.

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One worker recalled the moment on Sunday when the landslide hit.

"Suddenly, the lights in our factory went out, and we all ran out to see what had happened", he said. "We saw the landslide. ... It had engulfed power lines, and there was also red smoke."

Gao Zhen, deputy general manager of one of the factories, said all his workers fled to safety unharmed. The factory manufactures automatic industrial equipment, including robots. Gao said the hill where the landslide occurred had become a dump site for waste soil. "Earth was piled up on the hill without any reinforcement measures," he said.

He said production at many factories had been in full swing as Spring Festival approaches in February.

The landslide covered an area of 380,000 square meters with earth 10 meters deep, authorities said.

Seven trapped people had been rescued, the Shenzhen government said. At least 16 people were hospitalized, Xinhua News Agency reported.

The State Council has sent a team of senior officials and experts to Shenzhen to oversee rescue work. State Councilor Wang Yong is leading the team.

Xinhua contributed to this story.
 
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