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[溫哥華本地新聞] Rescue efforts resume at Johnsons Landing, B.C.,
Rescue efforts resume at Johnsons Landing, B.C., after massive slide leaves four missing
Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/Rescue+efforts+resume+Johnsons+Landing+after+massive+slide+leaves+four+missing/6925183/story.html#ixzz20W4kyQ1y
JOHNSONS LANDING, B.C. - Emergency crews in British Columbia's Kootenay region met at dawn to consider the most efficient and effective way to search a massive mudslide for possible victims.
Four people are still unaccounted for, nearly 24 hours after a wall of rock, mud and trees cascaded down the side of a mountain above the shores of Kootenay Lake, tearing through the tiny community of Johnsons Landing, about 70 kilometres northeast of Nelson.
At least three homes in the southeastern B.C. hamlet are engulfed by the muck, which is unstable and shifting, prompting searchers to call off rescue efforts at least once on Thursday afternoon.
Search efforts, suspended overnight, wll resume today with regional RCMP officers and search and rescue teams bolstered by members of the Vancouver-based Heavy Urban Search and Rescue team.
A landslide expert and geo-technicians are also at the scene, which can only be reached by boat because the dirt road leading to the remote community is covered by debris up to four metres deep.
A state of local emergency has been declared for the area and several residents have been evacuated to the community of Kaslo, across the lake from the slide.
On Thursday, Rachel Rozzoni had just let the ducks out of their coop at 10:30 a.m., and returned to the quiet house where her three children were still sleeping.
Her nine-month-old baby girl sensed it first — she started to cry.
Rozzoni thought the strange, rumbling sound above her home in tiny Johnsons Landing on Kootenay Lake was the sound of heavy equipment that had fallen over at a home where some trees were being cut down.
Then the windows and glasses in the house started shaking.
The rumbling turned into a massive landslide that officials say has destroyed at least three houses in the southern Interior community and led to a search for four possible victims who may be buried in the debris.
“I’m in my house watching old-growth trees and boulders the size of my house flying past. And then going, ‘Oh God, if it comes any closer we are all going to die,’” Rozzoni said Thursday evening.
“And then I’m looking down at my neighbour’s house and it’s covered in rubble and only the chimney is sticking out. And the other half of the house is down further, and just part of it sticking out.”
She and others tried to search the damaged homes, but found it impossible because their feet would sink a metre into the rubble. |
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