Death toll rises to 65 in Addis Ababa rubbish landslide

Sobbing relatives comb through trash after massive landslide at decades-old rubbish dump near Ethiopia's capital.



Sixty-five people have been confirmed dead in a landslide at a huge rubbish dump in Ethiopia's capital, as rescue workers and desperate relatives continued to comb through piles of fetid trash looking for survivors.

The disaster late on Saturday destroyed 49 makeshift homes inside the Koshe landfill site on the outskirts of Addis Ababa, city spokesman Amare Mekonen said. Residents said dozens of people were still missing.

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

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

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

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

It was not immediately clear what caused the collapse.

"We expect the number of victims to increase because the landslide covered a relatively large area," Dagmawit Moges, head of the city's communications bureau, said.


About 150 people were at the site when the landslide happened, resident Assefa Teklemahimanot told The Associated Press news agency.

Addis Ababa Mayor Diriba Kuma said 37 people had been rescued and were receiving medical treatment.

"In the long run, we will conduct a resettling programme to relocate people who live in and around the landfill," he said.

"My house was right inside there," said a shaken Tebeju Asres, pointing to where one of the excavators was digging in deep, black mud. "My mother and three of my sisters were there when the landslide happened. Now, I don't know the fate of all of them."

Residents blast government

The resumption of dumping at the site in recent months likely caused the landslide, Assefa said.

Dumping had stopped in recent years, but it resumed after farmers in a nearby region, where a new landfill complex was being built, blocked dumping in their area.


Smaller landslides have occurred at the Koshe landfill in the past two years, Assefa said.

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 local 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.

About 500 waste-pickers are believed to work at the landfill every day, sorting through waste from the capital's estimated four million residents. City officials say close to 300,000 tonnes of waste are collected each year from the capital, most of it dumped at the landfill.

City officials had warned the site was running out of room and in recent years had been trying to turn the rubbish into a source of clean energy with a $120m investment.

The Koshe waste-to-energy facility, which has been under construction since 2013, is expected to generate 50 megawatts of electricity upon completion.

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