At least three people were killed and at least seven were reported missing after a major landslide struck a tunnel road project site at Kalladi near Meppady in Kerala's Wayanad district on Tuesday.
The incident occurred near Meenakshi Bridge, where work on the Anakkompoyil-Meppadi tunnel project connecting Malappuram and Wayanad districts is underway.
The three people killed in the landslide have been identified as migrant workers from Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and Jharkhand.
According to PTI, the deceased are Chandraban, an operator from Madhya Pradesh; Bikash Kumar, a civil foreman from Bihar; and Anmol, a worker from Jharkhand.
State Health Minister K Muraleedharan said the bodies were recovered from beneath the debris after the landslide struck the construction site. Post-mortem examinations were completed at Vythiri Taluk Hospital, with a police surgeon brought from Bathery Taluk Hospital to expedite the process.
Nine injured persons were admitted to Meppadi WIMS Hospital. Two have since been discharged, while seven remain under treatment, including a site engineer from Ernakulam—the only Malayali among those hospitalised. Officials said his injuries are not serious.
Two of the injured are in the intensive care unit. One has fractures to the head and both legs, while the other has fractures in both legs.
Muraleedharan said a control room had been set up at the Meppadi Community Health Centre to coordinate medical services. A total of 142 people from 42 families living near the site have been shifted to a relief camp at Meppadi Polytechnic, where doctors and health workers have been deployed.
An ambulance and a medical team will remain stationed at the site overnight even after rescue operations are suspended. Health department services will continue round the clock under the coordination of Wayanad medical authorities, the minister said.
A CMO source said Chief Minister V D Satheesan will visit the site on Wednesday afternoon.
Earlier, a senior government official told reporters that there were no workers at the site and that those feared trapped under the mud were engineers and security staff.
"If work had been going on there, it would have been a bigger tragedy," she said.
A private bus reportedly used to ferry workers, which was parked at the site, was pushed into the nearby river by the landslide and was lying half-submerged as water flowed through it.
Sniffer dogs of the state police have been deployed at the site to trace those trapped under the thick mud, the statement said.
It also said facilities had been made available at the Mundakkai Forest Station and the Chooralmala church hall to shift locals, including members of tribal communities, stranded on both sides of the bridge.
Speaking to the media, Chief Minister V D Satheesan said the disaster was caused by the negligence of the contractors who failed to remove the huge quantity of mud accumulated near the construction site, despite warnings from the district administration and the Public Works Department.
Responding to a question from reporters, Satheesan said that the non-issuance of an appropriate weather alert was not the reason for the landslide.
"The soil there is mixed with mud and has got a different texture. The scrap soil was kept there and that was not stable. The disaster management authority had examined the area and told the contractors to remove it. Failure to remove soil from the place caused this mishap," he said.
Meanwhile, the contractor executing the road tunnel project attributed the landslide to exceptionally heavy monsoon rainfall, saying the work was being carried out in compliance with all prescribed engineering, safety and environmental protocols.
In a statement, Dilip Buildcon Ltd expressed sorrow over the incident and said its immediate priority was to support rescue operations and cooperate with the district administration and emergency agencies.
Citing data from the India Meteorological Department (IMD) and the Kerala State Disaster Management Authority (KSDMA), the company said Wayanad received around 265 mm of rainfall in the preceding 24 hours—among the highest recorded in the district this monsoon season.
It also said the project, located in an ecologically sensitive region, was being executed under multiple regulatory oversight mechanisms, including supervision by the Supreme Court-appointed Central Empowered Committee, and that excavated material was being handled as per the approved methodology.
"The room for technical error remains very limited. We remain fully committed to cooperating with the investigation and will continue to share verified information as it becomes available. Our focus remains on supporting the rescue efforts and standing with the affected families during this difficult time," the company said.
Earlier in the day, Kerala ministers termed the landslide a "man-made disaster", alleging that the company had failed to remove excavated earth despite directions from the district administration. The company's statement did not specifically address the allegation.
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