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Landslides kill at least 24 in Ecuador’s capital

Rescue workers carry away the body of a victim of flash flooding in La Gasca area of Quito, Ecuador
Rescue workers carry away the body of a victim of flash flooding in the La Gasca area of Quito, Ecuador, on Tuesday.
(Dolores Ochoa / Associated Press)
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A rain-weakened hillside collapsed in Ecuador’s capital, sweeping over homes and a sports field and killing at least 24 people, city officials said Tuesday.

The Quito Security Department said at least 48 more people were injured, while eight houses collapsed and others were damaged when the hillside gave way late Monday. The authorities also reported 12 missing people.

Neighbors had joined rescue workers in hunting through the ruins for survivors of the disaster that hit following nearly 24 hours of rainfall.

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The storm was pounding outside when Imelda Pacheco said she felt her house move as if an earthquake had struck. Suddenly water and rocks began to pour in through doors and windows, and she fled before the building was destroyed.

“I barely had time to grab the hand of my 4-year-old son, and I ran to the stairs, to the terrace. Suddenly the walls in front and to the side disappeared,” she told the Associated Press.

“We shouted to the neighbors on the first floor, but the water carried away the mother and daughter,” she said, standing before the ruins of her home.

“I thought I was going to die with my son. I hugged him strongly, and we shook, I think from the cold and the fear. We barely survived,” she added, breaking into tears.

Waves of mud, some 10 feet high, carried vehicles, motorcycles, trash bins and other debris under a heavy rain Monday night in the neighborhoods of La Gasca and La Comuna below the slopes of the Ruco Pinchincha mountain.

As the rescue began, police called for silence so that the cries of those trapped could be heard.

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Quito Mayor Santiago Guarderas said the intense rain had saturated the soil, setting off the landslide.

Smaller waves of muddy water continued pouring down the ravine Tuesday past weary neighbors trying to move stones, tree trunks and debris. An overturned taxi and other vehicles were partly buried in mud on a sports field.

“I’ve lost everything. I don’t have anything. Everything is over,” said 65-year-old Laura Quiñónez, who stood beside an ambulance as her neighbors tried to recover appliances from their destroyed homes.

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