Three dead, three missing in Alaskan landslide

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JUNEAU (AP) – Three people were killed and three were missing after a landslide barrelled down a heavily forested, rain-soaked mountainside and smashed into homes in a remote fishing community in southeast Alaska, United States.

The slide – estimated to be 137 metres wide – occurred at about 9pm on Monday during a significant rain and windstorm near Wrangell, an island community of 2,000 people some 250 kilometres south of the state capital of Juneau.

Rescue crews found the body of a girl in an initial search and the bodies of two adults were found by a drone operator on Tuesday.

Searchers used a cadaver-sniffing dog and heat-sensing drones to search for two children and one adult unaccounted for after the disaster, while the Coast Guard and other vessels looked along a waterfront littered with rocks, trees and mud.

Alaska State Troopers spokesperson Austin McDaniel said a woman who had been on the upper floor of a home was rescued.

The aftermath of a landslide in Wrangell, Alaska. PHOTO: AP
Survivors at the community centre, which opened for people displaced by the landslide. PHOTO: AP

She was in good condition and receiving medical care. One of the three homes that was struck was unoccupied, McDaniel said.

“Our community is resilient,” Wrangell interim borough manager Mason Villarma told The Associated Press in a phone interview. “And it always comes together for tragedies like this.

We’re broken, but resilient and determined to find everybody that’s missing.”

Governor Mike Dunleavy issued a disaster declaration for Wrangell, saying he and his wife were heartbroken and praying for all those affected. The landslide left a scar of barren earth from near the top of the mountain down to the ocean.

A wide swath of evergreen trees were ripped out of the ground and a highway was buried by debris, cutting off access and power to approximately 75 homes.