Sichuan, China—A sudden, high-velocity hillside landslide buried a critical stretch of a mountainous highway Friday afternoon, crushing a commercial passenger van and killing all five occupants inside. The environmental collapse occurred at 3:15 p.m. along a steep canyon route prone to geological instability during seasonal transitions. Tons of rock and mud dropped from a height of eighty meters, completely obliterating the vehicle on impact.
China Central Television broadcast images of emergency response teams climbing over the massive mound of earth to locate the buried vehicle. The physical force of the rockfall pushed the passenger van against the reinforced concrete retaining wall of the highway, flattening the chassis completely. Heavy rescue crews utilized hydraulic jaws to pry open the crushed metal structure.
Geological survey teams rushed to the site to monitor the remaining upper cliff face using laser telemetry equipment. Secondary rockfalls periodically disrupted the rescue operations, forcing workers to temporarily retreat to safe zones under the concrete rock-shed canopies nearby. The mud and rock debris covered a fifty-meter section of the two-lane transit link.
First responders confirmed that the five victims, including the driver, died instantly from massive blunt force trauma during the initial impact sequence. The van was operating on a regional intercity transit permit, moving passengers between rural townships when the slope failed. The identities of the deceased are being verified through ticketing manifests recovered from the terminal of origin.
Highway maintenance logs indicate that the specific hillside sector had been fitted with protective steel mesh netting last winter to mitigate rockfall hazards. The sheer volume and mass of the Friday slide completely sheared the anchoring bolts, bringing the protective grid down onto the roadway along with the soil mass. Heavy rainfall over the preceding forty-eight hours is cited as the primary environmental trigger.
The Sichuan provincial transport department issued an immediate closure notice for the entire mountain highway corridor, rerouting all commercial and private transit through a detour that adds four hours to the journey. Engineers are assessing whether secondary slopes along the route require emergency controlled blasting to prevent similar catastrophic failures.
Recovery personnel completed the delicate extraction of the remains just before twilight as weather conditions deteriorated. The bodies were moved to the nearest district hospital for mandatory identification and post-mortem charting by medical examiners.
Crews are currently using heavy bulldozers and front-end loaders to clear the rocks from the blocked lanes, but the highway is expected to remain closed for several days.
The regional government has deployed emergency geological patrol units to inspect all high-risk cliffs along the transit grid to ensure commuter safety before reopening the link.
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