Pahang, Malaysia—A massive hillside failure buried an active excavation pit at a major hydropower infrastructure project Friday afternoon, killing two foreign construction laborers. The landslide occurred at 2:30 p.m. following hours of persistent, heavy rainfall that saturated the exposed clay embankments above the main turbine tunnel entrance. Tons of mud, rocks, and uprooted trees slid down the steep incline, trapping the victims instantly.
The Pahang Police Headquarters mobilized a search and rescue operation consisting of canine units and heavy earth-moving equipment from the regional civil defense force. Rescue personnel faced significant environmental resistance as the unstable slope continued to drop smaller rockfalls into the lower work area during the extraction process. Mud depth reached four meters across the primary impact zone.
The deceased workers, both foreign nationals employed by the primary infrastructure subcontractor, were clearing drainage channels near the base of the ridge when the top soil gave way. Co-workers stationed on higher concrete platforms attempted to shout warnings, but the movement of the earth occurred too rapidly for escape. The bodies were recovered after three hours of systematic manual digging.
State safety engineers ordered a complete halt to all construction activities across the river basin grid until a thorough slope stabilization assessment can be executed. Inspectors noted that the natural vegetation had been completely cleared from the upper ridge during the initial road-cutting phase last month, leaving the soil directly exposed to water erosion. Rainwater accumulation logs show the area received double its average weekly precipitation.
The project consortium released a public statement expressing deep regret over the loss of life and confirmed that human resource officials are coordinating with respective embassies for repatriation protocols. They asserted that all slope protection measures, including temporary steel sheet piling, had been installed according to certified geological plans. Field inspectors are currently verifying if those walls were overwhelmed or bypassed by the slide mud.
Local environmental monitors have long warned about the systemic risks associated with large-scale earthworks in the steep mountainous terrain of the central peninsula during monsoon transitions. Soil displacement destabilizes historical runoff patterns, frequently creating artificial reservoirs behind temporary earthen barriers that can fail without warning. This incident marks the second localized slide in the district this year.
Forensic teams wrapped up their initial examination of the extraction site just before nightfall as the threat of secondary slides increased with renewed rainfall. The remains of the two laborers were transported directly to the state capital hospital for official post-mortem procedures to establish the exact cause of suffocation.
Geological experts remain stationed on adjacent peaks to monitor ground shift markers using precision laser telemetry. The site will remain entirely off-limits to all personnel except essential safety monitoring crews until the weather pattern clears.
The construction zone is currently monitored under an orange alert status, with no projected timeline for clearing the mud from the blocked tunnel portals.
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