UPDATES DEATH TOLL; ADDS DETAILS; CHANGES HEADLINE, LEDE; REVISES DECK; EDITS THROUGH
By Ahmad Adil
NEW DELHI (AA) - At least 93 people were killed in massive landslides in India's southern Kerala state, officials said on Tuesday.
A massive search operation is underway in the Wayanad district of Kerala, where hundreds of people are feared to be trapped. Officials’ Indian army and air force personnel have been deployed to rescue the people.
The landslides took place in the intervening night of Monday and Tuesday.
“We have recovered 93 bodies … There are 128 people receiving treatment for injuries,” Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said on Tuesday evening.
He said the landslide in Wayanad is a "heart-wrenching disaster" and an “entire area has been wiped out.”
An official at the Kerala chief minister’s office told Anadolu that heavy rainfall is making the rescue operation difficult in the district.
Indian Home Minister Amit Shah said the National Disaster Response Force is conducting search and rescue operations on a “war footing.”
“The second team is on its way to further strengthen the response operation,” he wrote on X.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he was saddened by the landslides in parts of Wayanad.
“Rescue ops are currently underway to assist all those affected,” he added.
Modi said he spoke to and also assured all “possible help from the centre in the wake of the prevailing situation there."
Vijayan’s office said on Tuesday morning that the chief minister had given directions to coordinate the rescue operations in Wayanad promptly following the “devastating landslide.”
The landslide came as the state has been witnessing heavy monsoon rains.