At least five people have been killed and 15 are still missing after a landslide cascaded down the terraced slopes of a rice field on the Indonesian island of Java today, officials said.
The victims, farmers tending their crops in Brebes district, Central Java, were buried under an avalanche of mud and rock around 8:00 am.
"The landslide buried the farmers working in their rice fields," disaster mitigation agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said in a statement.
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Another 14 farmers were found with light injuries and have been taken to a nearby medical centre for treatment.
Rescuers including the army, police and local volunteers are digging through debris to search for survivors, the agency said.
Residents have been forbidden from entering the area due to fears of further landslides.
"The soil is unstable, if it's raining, it could be dangerous," local sub-district head Apriyanto Sudarmoko told a national TV station.
"We also ask residents living near the site to vacate their homes until it's safe."
Landslides are common in Indonesia, especially during wet season between October and April, when rain lashes the country.
Eight miners were killed on the slopes of Mount Merapi, an active volcano near the city of Jogjakarta, in December last year.
A month earlier at least 11 people people died in heavy flooding and landslides in Pacitan, East Java.
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