Landslides claim at least 28 in India
June 9, 1997
Web posted at: 11:04 a.m. EDT (1504 GMT)
GANGTOK, India (CNN) -- Heavy rains triggered landslides in
mountainous northeastern India, killing at least 28 people,
authorities said Monday.
At least nine landslides hit Gangtok, capital of the
Himalayan state Sikkim, said police chief P.C. Sharma. One
landslide swept a four-story building onto two government
bungalows, crushing nine people, Sharma said.
Twenty-four bodies have been recovered and at least four more
were presumed dead, the chief said. The death toll may rise,
he said, as rescuers search the rubble.
"We are accustomed to landslides here and there," Sharma
said, "but this time it's something very serious."
The monsoon season, later in the year, usually brings
landslides to the state. Gangtok sits at an altitude of 5,000
feet (1,525 meters), surrounded by steep slopes rising to
8,000 feet (2,440 meters).
"I heard a loud noise around 9 last evening and rushed out
along with my family members and took shelter on the road,"
survivor Shipintso Bhutia said of Sunday night's mudslide.
"Seconds after, I saw the hillside tumbling down, which took
away my house."
Sikkim, surrounded by Tibet, Nepal and Bhutan, has been part
of India since 1975, when its legislature voted to abolish
its monarchy and join the Indian union.
Reuters contributed to this report.
Related sites:
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- Sikkim: Gangtok - information about the capital of Sikkim from Government of India Tourist Office, New York, New York
- Sikkim - description of India's eastern Himalayan region
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