Ethiopian dump landslide kills 65

Some 65 people are dead after a landslide at an Ethiopian rubbish dump crashed through makeshift homes, burying the inhabitants.

Rescuers at the scene of a garbage landslide in Ethiopia

Some 65 people are dead after a landslide at an Ethiopian rubbish dump crashed through homes. (AAP)

Parents in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa are searching through a towering pile of fetid garbage, screaming the names of children buried after a mountain of trash collapsed on makeshift homes and killing at least 65 people.

"My babies, my babies, my little daughter," cried one man wandering through the garbage dump in the Ethiopian capital, tears streaming down his face on Monday. Neighbours said he had lost his wife and four children.

The landslide late on Saturday destroyed 49 dwellings and left 28 people injured, city spokesman Amare Mekonen said. Residents said dozens were still missing.

Hundreds of people live on the 50-year-old Reppi dump, the city's only landfill site, scavenging for food and items they can sell such as recyclable metal.

On Monday, rescuers used bulldozers to move piles of trash as hundreds of people gathered at the scene, weeping and praying. Some dug through the garbage with their hands.

On one side of the hill, volunteers sobbed as they pulled out three corpses, including a child found on top of its mother.

Meselu Damte said the weeping man had lost his wife and four children.

Diggers used makeshift stretchers of plastic sheets to carry corpses to a single ambulance parked nearby.

Some volunteers expressed anger at the city administration. As well as the two excavators, only three ambulance workers were at the site. Scuffles broke out between them and residents as journalists approached.

"Stop pretending for the cameras!" one resident said. "They haven't provided us with anything. Not even gloves. When it gets dark, we are using our mobile phones (for light)."

"We have warned the authorities for more than 10 years as the rubbish piled up. There has not been any response. It is criminal negligence," said Taye Woldeamanuel, a 48-year-old whose sister narrowly survived the landslide.


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Source: AAP


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