Heavy rain triggers landslide, eight houses affected at Kg Orang Asli Batu 12 in Gombak

Weekly Echo’s file photo of a swollen river passing the Orang Asli village in Gombak following heavy rain, pushing along construction debris and contributing to floods in the area. Claims of unchecked development and destabilised soil have resurfaced following a recent landslide.

GOMBAK, Dec 5 (Bernama)  — An elderly woman faced a terrifying moment when her kitchen wall collapsed and part of her house nearly slipped down a slope after a landslide caused by heavy rain at Kampung Orang Asli Batu 12, here last Wednesday.

Halimah Yunos, 71, one of 47 affected residents, said the incident occurred around 7 pm after continuous rain caused soil movement along the water channel running through the village.

“As soon as I realised the kitchen floor had collapsed, I called my son, who lives next door, to help move the items in the kitchen to the centre of the house before we headed to the relief centre.

“It was frightening in the heavy rain. Thankfully, I was not in the kitchen at that moment,” she said when met at the Batu 12 Orang Asli Multipurpose Hall relief centre today.

She said soil movement had been detected since Nov 25, but Wednesday’s incident made her home unsafe to live in.

Another resident, Mahadil Ali, 55, said this was the first landslide incident since the settlement opened in 1991.

He claimed that water and construction debris from the East Coast Rail Link (ECRL) project, located about 200 metres uphill and channelled into the village’s waterway, contributed to the soil instability.

“If we are asked to relocate, I will agree because the ground under my house is no longer safe,” he said.

A representative from the Gombak MP’s Office, Hazmimi Johar, who visited the victims at the relief centre, said the relocation of eight families on Wednesday night was coordinated with the Department of Orang Asli Development (JAKOA), the Gombak District Office and rescue teams.

“All affected residents will remain at the relief centre until a safer resettlement area is identified, and food and essential aid will continue to be provided,” he said, adding that about 1,400 Orang Asli live in 290 houses in the village.

Meanwhile, Selangor Fire and Rescue Department (JBPM) deputy director (Operations) Ahmad Mukhlis Mokhtar said an emergency call was received at 7.10 pm, and a team from the Selayang Fire Station was sent to the location.

He said checks at the site found a landslide about 7.6 metres high covering an area of 100 square feet, affecting eight houses. No casualties were reported.

— BERNAMA