Around 150 people are feared dead after more than three days of heavy rain triggered two landslides in central Sri Lanka, disaster officials said yesterday as rescuers stopped work after recovering more than a dozen bodies.
Torrential rains have forced more than 223,000 people from their homes across the South Asian country, the latest official data showed. Seventeen bodies have been recovered, bringing the official death toll to 37, although that figure is likely to rise sharply.
Rescue efforts have focused on the town of Aranayaka, 100km (60 miles) northeast of the capital, Colombo, where three villages were buried late on Tuesday in the central district of Kegalle.
“As at 1800 hours, 134 are still missing and 14 bodies recovered so far from the landslide site in Aranayaka,” Major General Sudantha Ranasinghe, officer in charge of rescue
operation, said.
“We have stopped the operations for the day since it’s dark and the operation continued for over 20 hours. We will start again tomorrow morning.”
More than 350 people were plucked to safety during rescue operations in landslide-affected areas early yesterday, officials said.
A Red Cross official who attended a disaster meeting at the Aranayaka landslide site said earlier it was feared the death toll would be “around 300-400”.
Police said another landslide at Bulathkopitiya, also in Kegalle district, had buried at least 16 people. Only three bodies were found from this site. In Kegalle district alone, 20 people were killed, disaster management centre data showed.
Military Spokesman Jayanath Jayaweera said 150 people who were rescued from Aranayaka had been sent to six camps set up for displaced
people in the area.
Troops using boats and helicopters also pulled to safety more than 200 people trapped in the northwestern coastal district of Puttalam, Jayaweera said.
Flooding and drought are cyclical in Sri Lanka, which is battered by a southern monsoon between May and September, while a northeastern monsoon runs from December to February.
President mourns devastating loss: Sri Lanka’s president mourned the island’s “devastating loss” yesterday as the death toll from three days of torrential rain and landslides rose to 37, with more than 150 missing and rescuers still pulling bodies from the mud.
President Maithripala Sirisena flew to a central tea-growing area where images taken from a helicopter showed floodwaters engulfing entire villages and forested hills deluged with reddish mud.
“The loss is devastating,” the president posted on Twitter.
The president met with people who had lost their loved ones as well as seen their homes destroyed, an official who travelled with him said.
Sirisena has ordered troops to help evacuate people living on slopes or in flood-hit areas, while the navy and the air force have also been called in to help with relief operations.
The meteorological department said the heavy rains were caused by a depression in the Bay of Bengal and were expected to subside yesterday.

Related Story