*** ----> Rain wreaks havoc in kerala | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Rain wreaks havoc in kerala

Some of the about 200 people who fled from the Puthumala landslip to the nearby forest office at Mundakkayam near Meppadi in Kerala’s Wayanad district has been evacuated by rescue workers even as four bodies have been recovered from the debris of the landslip that struck the hilly plantation area on Thursday afternoon.

The district recorded 250-300 mm rainfall over the past day. At least six people have so far been killed in the landslips at Muttil and Puthumala, authorities said.

Reports say around 80 members of the National Disaster Response Force and Defence Security Corps have arrived at Puthumala. Roads and bridges leading to the area have been washed off and access is extremely difficult. Rescue workers had to walk up to 3 km in slushy uphill terrain to reach the forest range office at Mundakkayam.

Authorities and local residents feel that more bodies could be found under the mounds of rocks and soil that gushed down on Thursday, taking along a section of the Vellarimala hill along. Since the plantation estate employed several migrant workers, mainly from Assam, those missing could include some of them too, the locals said. Many houses of plantation workers’ quarters (called ‘paadi’), a temple, a mosque and an estate canteen were washed away in the landslip.

Inaccessibility by road is the biggest challenge faced by the rescue workers and the marooned people.

Those who have been evacuated told authorities and mediapersons that the area had witnessed a series of minor landslips since Wednesday, but the one on Thursday afternoon proved to be massive and deadly.

Meanwhile officials have reported an “unimaginably high” rainfall of 550 mm in the Puthumala area in Wayanad district.

The rainfall of 550 mm over the past day was recorded by the rain-gauge station set up by the Irrigation Department near Puthumala. Across the Wayanad district the rainfall was 250 mm to 300 mm.