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Six dead, 14 missing after landslide at Indonesian Papua gold mine

Six dead, 14 missing after landslide at Indonesian Papua gold mine

Officials said that torrential rains on Monday forced a halt to the search for Indonesia's 14 missing people in its easternmost region, Papua. A landslide at a gold-mining site killed six workers and injured four others.

Abdul Muhari said that the rains were responsible for the landslide on Friday, which struck a small mine operated by residents in the Arfak Mountains of West Papua Province.

The authorities will resume their search on Tuesday for the missing following the disaster that engulfed temporary housing used by miners.

Yefri Sabarruddin, leader of a 40-person team, which included police and military officers, and recovered five bodies, said that the search was hindered by "damaged tracks and mountains as well as bad climate".

He said that it would take 12 hours to travel from the nearest city to the site.

The Monday tally has been updated from the earlier figure of 19 missing and one dead.

In Indonesia, accidents caused by illegal and small-scale mining have often occurred in areas where minerals are found in remote locations with conditions that are difficult to regulate.

The number of fatalities could increase.

In September last year, heavy rains caused a landslide that led to the collapse of a gold mine illegal in West Sumatra.

In July of last year, another landslide at a gold-mining site on the island of Sulawesi killed 23 people. (Reporting and editing by Ananda Teresia, Clarence Fernandez, and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

(source: Reuters)