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Indonesian rescuers fear nearly 30 people buried in Java landslide

Rescue efforts were hampered due to people were flocking to the area to see the landslide.

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Indonesian rescuers recover the body of a woman from the scene after a wall of mud slammed onto houses from a hillside following heavy rainfall in Ponorogo district, East Java on April 2, 2017.
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Indonesian rescuers, joined by police and soldiers, found one body and continued to look for 28 other people feared to be buried after a landslide triggered by heavy rain on Indonesia's Java island, a spokesman for the national disaster agency said. 

The mud and debris from Saturday's landslide in a village in the Ponorogo area of East Java had engulfed more than 20 houses after sliding 800 metres down a hillside, National Disaster Management Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said.

Some of the victims were believed to include a group harvesting a crop of ginger in fields around the village, he said.

17 people had been injured and were being treated at a community health centre. 

Rescue efforts were hampered by people flocking to the area to see the landslide and causing traffic jams, he said earlier.

The local disaster mitigation agency had warned of the risk of a landslide due to recent rain, and some people had only returned to the village on Saturday after staying the night in a shelter, said the official.

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