Originally published by the Voice of America (www.voanews.com).
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Floods, Landslides in India Kill Hundreds
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=E5F3EA:3919ACA

In one area, workers trying to reach some 100 people buried under
landslide, but hopes fading that anyone will be found alive



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Landslide scene, with rescuers from Rapid Action Force policeMore than
500 people have died as a result of torrential rains in and around the
Indian city of Bombay. In one area, workers are trying to reach some
100 people buried under a landslide, but hopes are fading that anyone
will be found alive.

Rescue workers used pick axes, shovels and an earth-moving machine
Thursday to remove tons of debris that had fallen in a landslide in
the Bombay slum area of Saki Nagar.

Witnesses say shacks built at the top of a cliff fell when the cliff
collapsed in heavy rains Tuesday. Along with tons of earth and stone,
they landed on other shacks built about 100 meters below.







Volunteers passing debris out of landslide siteTeams of volunteers
lined the narrow alleyways leading out of the slum area to pass rocks
and debris away from the site.

Fourteen-year-old Mohammed Azad says nine members of his family are
buried under the debris. He and his one surviving relative are no
longer hopeful they will be found alive.

The teenager says he was outside when the landslide happened. But he
saw it and started shouting for people to leave. But before they could
get out, everything just came down.

Witnesses say the cliff collapsed in the late afternoon Tuesday. But
it was not until a day later that police and fire department officials
reached the scene. It was even longer before they brought in heavy
equipment to help residents and panicked family members in their
desperate search for survivors.

Officials say the rain that began Tuesday was the heaviest Bombay has
ever recorded. It caused power outages, downed phone lines, shut the
airport and brought the city's train and bus services to a halt,
leaving thousands stranded.

Bombay's Joint Chief Fire Officer, G.S. Sawant, says rescue workers
would have reached the landslide site sooner, but they simply did not
know about it until the morning after.

"The telephone and all communications from day before yesterday was
dead," he said. "We got the call yesterday in the morning at 8
o'clock."

Saki Nagar was not the only area struck by tragedy. Hundreds of others
were killed in a series of weather-related incidents across
Maharashtra, the state where Bombay is located.

Some 15 million people live in Bombay, India's financial capital.
While it is often associated with big business and India's homegrown
"Bollywood" film industry, it is also has an estimated slum population
of six million - people unable to afford the city's high land prices.

Javad Shekhar is the only one of 14-year-old Mohammed Azad's relatives
to survive the landslide. He says he's not angry about the tragedy, at
least, not really.

"It's nature's fault, but if we didn't have to live here, my family
would have survived," he said.