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Shenzhen landslide
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Excavators working at the scene of the disaster last month. Photo: AFP

58 confirmed dead in Shenzhen landslide disaster, dozens more still missing

The number of people confirmed killed in a huge landslide last month in China has risen to 58, the authorities said, with several more still missing.

The landslide in the southern city of Shenzhen, which was caused by the improper storage of waste from construction sites, was the latest in a series of fatal man-made accidents in the world’s most populous country.

Initially only seven people were declared dead with scores missing, but the Shenzhen authorities said on a verified social media account that a total of 58 bodies had been recovered by Wednesday, and efforts were continuing.

READ MORE: Eleven arrested over Shenzhen landslide as authorities swoop and search continues for 62 missing people

The updated toll implied that at least 25 people were still missing.

Soil was illegally piled 100 metres high at an old quarry site and turned to mud in heavy rain on December 20, according to earlier Chinese media reports.

More than 10,600 rescuers and nearly 2,200 heavy machines have been mobilised in the rescue efforts and more than two million cubic metres of earth were moved, the Shenzhen authorities said.

China is prone to accidents linked to lax industrial safety enforcement.

A coal mine collapse in the northern province of Shanxi on Wednesday trapped 11 miners, weeks after a gypsum mine in Shandong province in the east caved in while 29 miners were working underground, with only 11 escaping or rescued so far.

READ MORE: After Shenzhen landslide, residents of China’s big cities wonder when disaster will strike next

Chemical blasts in the northern port city of Tianjin killed almost 200 people in August in one of the most deadly industrial accidents to hit the country in recent years.

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