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- Pune landslide toll reaches 25, rescue operations on; Rajnath Singh to visit site today
Wednesday, 30 July 2014
Home minister Rajnath Singh reached Pune on Wednesday night to
take an overview of the rescue operations at Malin village which was
buried in a landslide, killing at least 25 people and trapping more than
160, officials said.
Heavy monsoon rains have lashed the hills in the area the past
few days, causing rocks and mud to loosen and tumble down on houses at
Malin village, 80km from Pune. Authorities fear that the death toll
could mount as most of the 67 houses in the village were buried under a
25 feet pile of rocks and mud.
Accompanied by Vinod Tawde, leader of Opposition in the Maharashtra legislative council, and other officials, Rajnath Singh will travel to the disaster site on Thursday morning.
Read: People died in their sleep, say survivors
Depending on the prevailing weather conditions, Rajnath Singh may make an aerial survey of the disaster site at Malin.
Earlier on Wednesday evening, chief minister Prithviraj Chavan, deputy chief minister Ajit Pawar, assembly Speaker Dilip Walse-Patil and ministers Harshavardhan Patil and Madhukarrao Pichad visited the site and directed the rescue operations.

A 300-strong team, comprising the National Disaster Response Force, Maharashtra Disaster Response Force, police, villagers and political activists, braved inclement weather and frantically searched for trapped people under stones, boulders and sticky mud.
In New Delhi, Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed anguish over the tragedy.
Heavy rain, which has lashed the picturesque region over the past four days, continued to hamper relief operations the whole day and prevented rescuers from approaching the accident site as, due to the flowing water, the mud kept shifting.
Read: Chavan says focus is on saving maximum lives
The villagers sleeping in their homes were caught unawares and many continue to be trapped under the mud, boulders and debris, said Walse-Patil.
An army team was also sent from Pune.
District officials said people in around half a dozen other villages in the hilly neighbourhood are being evacuated as a precautionary measure.

In
this handout photograph released by the Maharashtra chief minister's
office, excavators dig through mud and debris at the scene of a
landslide in Malin village in Pune. (AFP photo)
Accompanied by Vinod Tawde, leader of Opposition in the Maharashtra legislative council, and other officials, Rajnath Singh will travel to the disaster site on Thursday morning.
Depending on the prevailing weather conditions, Rajnath Singh may make an aerial survey of the disaster site at Malin.
Earlier on Wednesday evening, chief minister Prithviraj Chavan, deputy chief minister Ajit Pawar, assembly Speaker Dilip Walse-Patil and ministers Harshavardhan Patil and Madhukarrao Pichad visited the site and directed the rescue operations.

A 300-strong team, comprising the National Disaster Response Force, Maharashtra Disaster Response Force, police, villagers and political activists, braved inclement weather and frantically searched for trapped people under stones, boulders and sticky mud.
In New Delhi, Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed anguish over the tragedy.
Heavy rain, which has lashed the picturesque region over the past four days, continued to hamper relief operations the whole day and prevented rescuers from approaching the accident site as, due to the flowing water, the mud kept shifting.
Read: Chavan says focus is on saving maximum lives
The villagers sleeping in their homes were caught unawares and many continue to be trapped under the mud, boulders and debris, said Walse-Patil.
An army team was also sent from Pune.
District officials said people in around half a dozen other villages in the hilly neighbourhood are being evacuated as a precautionary measure.