Costa Rica landslide kills 20 people

SAN JOSE, (Reuters) – A landslide caused by heavy  rain killed 20 people in Costa Rica yesterday as President  Laura Chinchilla considered declaring a national emergency to  help the coffee-growing nation deal with widespread flooding.

The National Emergency Commission said 15 people remained  missing after rains overnight loosened a swathe of Cerro Pico  Blanco, a mountain popular with hikers and rock climbers,  causing the mudslide that buried poorly constructed houses.

Chinchilla told a conference earlier on Thursday the  disaster was one of the worst the Central American nation had  confronted. “It has been a great national tragedy,” she said.

Rescuers searched for survivors in San Antonio de Escazu,  where shanty homes are mixed in with stately dwellings  belonging to foreigners drawn to its trails and wooded areas.

Over 1,300 people in the capital and along Costa Rica’s  Pacific coast were moved to shelters to flee the flooding  prompted by rains pelting the country this week.

Local media said the rains also damaged a dam in Parrita,  close to the Pacific coast, but engineers had trouble reaching  the area because of road damage and bad weather.

Presidency Minister Marco Vargas said the government might  declare a national emergency, which would provide Costa Rica  access to funds from the Inter-American Development Bank and  the World Bank to help rebuild roads, bridges and homes.
Chinchilla has requested neighboring countries help Costa  Rican authorities reach remote areas grappling with flooding.  She said intense rain was likely to continue.

National Emergency Commission President Vanessa Rosales said  the rains may have had damaged several major coffee areas in  Costa Rica’s highlands. No official figures were available.