Official says landslide triggered by heavy rains kills 39 in southern India
By Ashok Sharma, APTuesday, November 10, 2009
Landslide kills 39 in southern India
NEW DELHI — A landslide triggered by torrential seasonal rains swept through a hilly region in southern India, killing at least 39 people, an official said Tuesday.
The landslide demolished nearly 300 tin-roofed mud huts Monday in the Ooty and Coonoor region of Tamil Nadu state, a state flood control official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to reporters. The region is nearly 1,120 miles (1,800 kilometers) south of the capital, New Delhi.
Rescuers found 14 bodies in the debris Monday and another 25 on Tuesday, the official said, adding that eight injured people were hospitalized.
Ooty is a popular tourist destination, but none of those killed or injured were foreigners, he said.
India’s June-September monsoon season causes severe flooding and kills hundreds of people across the country. But the annual monsoon brings rains that are vital to agriculture in India.
It is common for the southern parts of the country to receive heavy rains in November and December.
Tags: Asia, India, New Delhi, Rainy Seasons, South Asia, Weather Conditions