Many feared dead in Mexican landslide

Debris from fallen trees and damaged homes lies on the ground after flooding in the town of Oxolotan in the Tabasco region of Mexico.

A hillside collapsed on hundreds of sleeping residents in a nearby rural community drenched for days by a hurricane and a tropical storm, killing at least seven and leaving at least 100 missing, disaster officials said.

The death toll could rise much higher in Santa Maria Tlahuitoltepec, a town about 130 miles south-east of Mexico City.

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Oaxaca state Civil Protection operations coordinator Luis Marin said 100 people were confirmed missing, but Oaxaca Governor Ulises Ruiz told the Televisa television network 500 to 1,000 people could be buried.

At least 100 homes were buried, and residents who made it out have had no success digging out their neighbours, said Donato Vargas, an official in Santa Maria de Tlahuitoltepec.

“There is a lot of mud. We can’t even see the homes, we can’t hear shouts, we can’t hear anything,” he said.

An eighth person was killed in another mudslide in the state of Oaxaca.

Weeks of heavy rains, including those brought by Hurricane Karl and Tropical Storm Matthew, have caused havoc.