Emergency crews clawed through huge piles of mud on Monday in a desperate bid to rescue more than 100 people missing in a landslide that has claimed at least 23 lives in Colombia.
Antioquia department officials said a wall of mud slid down a sodden hillside on Sunday, burying about three dozen homes.
"We've found 23 bodies," said Antioquia government spokesman Jorge Salazar, as rescue crews continued working at the disaster site near Medellin, the country's second-largest city, some 245 kilometers northwest of Bogota.
Earlier, after seven survivors were pulled from the mud, Justice and Interior Minister German Vargas said "more than 100" were still missing in the area.
Salazar said the search for survivors has benefited from a dry spell, but that it would be called off if any further downpours took place.
"Rescue crews are under orders to evacuate immediately... because there's a risk of more landslides," he added.
Salazar said President Juan Manuel Santos was expected to visit the disaster site when he returns from a visit to New York on Tuesday morning and meet with local officials.
Hundreds of rescuers including police, emergency services, soldiers and local residents used their bare hands, shovels and pick-axes to break into the wall of mud in the hillsides above the town of Bello after the worst downpours to hit the country in decades, which have left nearly 200 people dead and 1.5 million homeless.
The tragedy occurred after a hillside perched above Bello's La Gabriela neighborhood gave way after being saturated by weeks of the record rains.
A rescue team looking for survivors was several hundred strong, but hope of finding many survivors has diminished as time wore on, a day after the calamity.
Red Cross operations deputy director Cesar Uruena said emergency personnel worked through the night, beginning late on Sunday.
"We are working by hand. We are in the first 48 hours, the period in which all efforts are focused on saving lives," he told AFP.
Men and women wept as they climbed over the earth, rocks and uprooted trees that poured like an avalanche over the homes of their loved ones, as emergency personnel began pulling lifeless bodies from the mud's grip.
Some sat helpless and in solitude on the debris covering their home while armed soldiers and police observed sniffer dogs from afar.
(中国日报网英语点津 Helen 编辑)
Todd Balazovic is a reporter for the Metro Section of China Daily. Born in Mineapolis Minnesota in the US, he graduated from Central Michigan University and has worked for the China Daily for one year.