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![Egyptians search for survivors under the rubble of homes at the site of a massive rock slide off [AFP] Egyptians search for survivors under the rubble of homes at the site of a massive rock slide off [AFP]](http://mwcnews.net/images/stories/Egypt/2/3/4/Cairo-rockslide-1.jpg) | | Egyptians search for survivors under the rubble of homes at the site of a massive rock slide off [AFP] | Up to 500 people are feared to have been buried in their homes after a mountain landslide crushed a town on the outskirts of Egypt's capital.
At least 18 people have been declared dead and 35 injured after at least eight rocks, some measuring 30m high, buried more than 50 homes in the poor district of Manshiyet Nasron on Saturday, officials said. A six-storey building was reduced to rubble by the rockfall, one witness said. Hassan Ibrahim Hassan, 80, whose house escaped the destruction, said: "It was horror. "The power went out, we heard a loud bang like an earthquake, and I thought this house had collapsed. "I went out and I saw the whole mountain had collapsed." Slow response Relatives and neighbours dug with their hands among the rubble for survivors or bodies, while police brought in sniffer dogs to locate those trapped. Soldiers from the Egyptian military used heavy machinery to lift the rocks, some weighing between 60 and 70 tons. Locals were enraged at what they said was as an inadequate response by the government. Witnesses described hundreds of weeping and screaming family members cursing the local authorities and saying they had relatives and friends trapped beneath the rubble. "You've just got your hands in your pockets, you're not doing anything!" one man yelled at police nearby. Another said: "If it were the Shura council [Egypt's upper house of parliament], you'd have had the army in by now," in reference to a fire at the parliamentary building in August. Potential danger![Rescue teams struggled to make progress because of the size of the boulders [AFP] Rescue teams struggled to make progress because of the size of the boulders [AFP]](http://mwcnews.net/images/stories/Egypt/2/3/4/Cairo-rockslide-2.jpg) | | Rescue teams struggled to make progress because of the size of the boulders [AFP] |
Manshiyet Nasr residents had informed the authorities a year ago that there was a split between the rocks which posed a potential danger to the homes below. A similar landslide had occurred in 1994 in the area when 30 people were killed by a falling rock. Manshiyet Nasr is a small village regarded as overcrowded with most families sharing a single room in apartment buildings. The town's buildings are cramped at the base of the Mouqattum hills next to a main highway into Cairo. In a survey carried out by UN Habitat, a human settlement programme, Manshiyet Nasr is described as "the largest squatter, informal area in Cairo. There are 350,000 persons living in this area on about 850 acres with a gross residential density more than 400 persons per acre". "The area is suffering from poor living qualities, inadequate services, lack of infrastructure, and deteriorated environmental conditions," the survey said. In 2003, the housing ministry, under the auspices of the Suzanne Mubarak, the wife of the Egyptian president, launched a campaign to provide housing for some of the poorest Cairo residents, including in the affected town.
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Tags: Cairo rockslide Egypt
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