- More than 200 people have been reported dead after a landslide hit coltan mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
ZetaTalk: Most Terrible Day


"The causes of landslides are not a mystery to mankind. Layers of rock and soil such that rain running along a clay or rock layer can create a slippery surface for the weight of the layers above it is a common cause. A rock jumble from previous mountain building, broken or fractured rock easily dislodged. We have stated that the earthquakes man experiences between the periodic passages of Planet X can be considered aftershocks from the last passage, and this is true of landslides also. Mountain building rumples the landscape, so the land is not flat but has steep ravines and hill sides. Older mountain ranges are recognized for their rounded or smoothed appearance, because of frequent landslides distributing the rubble.
"As we approach another passage, another Pole Shift, the pace of landslides has picked up. Why would this be? Plates under pressure will put pressure on regions that contain rumpled hillsides and deep ravines, as these give more readily than strictly flat land, thus act as a weak link. In addition, due to the wobble, the weather has gotten more extreme, with drought and deluge increasing in extremes. Dry ground, suddenly flooded with rainwater needing to seek its level as runoff, will create internal water slides between the rock and soil layers that constitute the rumpled hillsides. Is there an early warning system that mankind could use? The trembles that soil about to slide emits could be detected, yes. These are not earthquakes, and have their own frequency. "
Comment
https://news.sky.com/story/more-than-200-killed-after-landslide-hit...
Heavy rain in the Democratic Republic of Congo leads to the collapse of mines used to extract coltan - used in phones, computers and aircraft engines.
Saturday 31 January 2026 10:35, UK

Many bodies are still buried under the mud following the tragedy near Rubaya, in the east of the country, earlier this week.
The mines are under the control of rebel group M23. Lumumba Kambere Muyisa, a spokesperson of the rebel-appointed governor of North-Kivu province, said the landslide was caused by heavy rain.
"More than 200 people were victims of this landslide, including miners, children and market women," he said. "Some people were rescued just in time and have serious injuries," he said.

A former miner at the site spoke of the dangers of repeated landslides because tunnels had been dug by hand, poorly constructed, and left without maintenance.
"People dig everywhere, without control or safety measures," Clovis Mafare said. "In a single pit, there can be as many as 500 miners, and because the tunnels run parallel, one collapse can affect many pits at once."
Sky News found children as young as four working in the unregulated mines in the DRC.
The country has been hit by violence between government forces and different armed groups, including the Rwanda-backed M23, for decades.
In May 2024, M23 seized Rubaya and took control of its mines.
Landslides sweep through a city on Italy's Sicilian island, where a massive landslide has caused entire residential neighborhoods to collapse from the slopes.
The landslide, triggered by heavy rains, extended up to 4 kilometers and is still expanding.
Thousands of residents have been evacuated from the threatened areas.
Niscemi, Italy
About 500 residents were evacuated after a landslide tore through part of the Italian town of Niscemi, damaging a key access road and raising fears the area could be cut off, according to officials.
The landslide was reported Sunday in the Sante Croci neighborhood of Niscemi, a town in Sicily, Italy’s largest island.
Authorities said the slope failure occurred near the Benefizio stream and affected a section of Provincial Road SP10, one of the main links between the area and the town center. The ground collapse was estimated at about 20 feet (6 meters).
Authorities said geological surveys were underway to determine whether the current landslide is connected to a separate slope failure reported on January 16 in another nearby area that also damaged a provincial road.
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At least 6 people killed and 89 are missing after a landslide in Pasirlangu, Cisarua District, West Java, Indonesia 🇮🇩
Via https://t.me/Disaster_News
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/1/24/seven-dead-82-missing-afte...
Latest disaster comes just weeks after deadly floods and landslides left more than 1,000 people dead in Indonesia’s west.

Rescue teams are searching for survivors after a landslide in the West Bandung region of Indonesia’s West Java province left at least seven people dead and dozens missing, local officials have said.
“The number of missing persons is high, we will try to optimise our search and rescue efforts today,” Abdul Muhari, the spokesperson for Indonesia’s disaster mitigation agency, said on Saturday.
Indonesian news outlet Kompas said a landslide hit Pasirlangu village in West Bandung at about 2am local time on Saturday morning (19:00 GMT on Friday).
“A strong flow” of water and loose soil from the slopes of Mount Burangrang smashed into some 30 homes in the village while most of their inhabitants were sleeping, Kompas said.
Local Police Chief AY Yogaswara said the landslide was accompanied by flash flooding, according to Jakarta-based Antara news agency.
“When the incident occurred, residents heard a loud rumbling sound,” Yogaswara said.
Indonesia’s armed forces, the regional disaster management agency, volunteers, and the local community are all involved in emergency response efforts, he said.
Fearing further tragedy, local authorities have ordered the evacuation of residents in areas which are known to be prone to landslides. The area affected by the landslide on Saturday is estimated to cover some 30 hectares (74 acres), Kompas reports.
Indonesia’s weather agency had warned of extreme weather, including heavy rains in West Java province for a week from Friday, according to reports.Antara also reported that flooding hit 20 of the 30 sub-districts of West Java’s Karawang regency, due to the Citarum and Cibeet rivers overflowing. Regional government officials had advised residents living near the rivers to evacuate immediately, according to Antara.
Saturday’s disaster follows deadly landslides and flooding last month that left more than 1,170 people dead across Indonesia’s North Sumatra, West Sumatra, and Aceh provinces.
The Indonesian government has filed lawsuits against six companies over environmental degradation suspected of contributing to the deadly disaster.
Indonesia is facing increased risks of natural disasters due to environmental changes, including deforestation – often linked to global palm oil demand – climate change and rising sea levels.

https://timesofmalta.com/article/piece-filfla-breaks-off-duing-stor...
Experts warn stronger and more frequent storms will endanger marine and bird species
The missing piece of Filfla on the island's eastern side. Photo: Jonathan BorgIf you gazed towards Filfla today and thought it looked a bit different than usual, that’s because it is, after a substantial piece of the tiny island off Malta’s south coast collapsed during Storm Harry earlier this week.
Photos taken by Times of Malta and from Facebook page Dwardu Photography show a missing piece and a new sheer cliff on the eastern side of the islet when compared to photos taken before the storm.
Speaking to Times of Malta, biologist Alan Deidun said that while he had not heard about the collapse, he was not surprised by it, as the rock is fragile and highly unstable.
A close-up of the collapsed cliff face. Photo: Dwardu PhotographyNot only is the islet exposed to the elements on all sides, but up until 1971 it was used by the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force for target practice. Unexploded ordnance from these bombardments can still be found on and around Filfla.
While it is mostly barren, since 1980 Filfla has also been a bird reserve. Martin Austad, the head of seabird research at Bird Life Malta, said the island is home to the biggest colony of European storm petrels (Kanġu ta' Filfla) in the Mediterranean.
“Filfla is constantly changing due to weather and sea erosion. If it were ever to be lost, it would have huge knock-on effects on the species around the world,” he said.
Austad said that the effects of climate change, which resulted in stronger and more frequent storms, together with increased construction and light pollution, were putting pressure on species of birds that roost in cliff faces, such as the Yelkouan shearwater
“Having fewer places where to lay their eggs means that colonies will be more concentrated into smaller areas, making the species more vulnerable to coastal erosion,” he said.
Meanwhile, Deidun said the worst hit marine flora and fauna during Storm Harry were those that lived in shallow areas and couldn’t move to caves or deeper waters to seek shelter, including Neptune grass (Posidonia oceanica), coral, sea urchins and other similarly immobile creatures.
“The degradation of Posidonia meadows also worsens the impact of such storms, as the grass absorbs some of the energy of the waves before they reach the shore,” he said.
Filfla was by no means the only place to face the full force of Storm Harry, which peaked on Tuesday. In Siġġiewi’s Għar Lapsi, which is located directly opposite Filfla, the storm demolished a platform popular with bathers ,as well as the lower end of a slipway and a flight of steps that lead to the cave.
https://www.the-sun.com/news/15823520/coffins-cliff-cemetery-landsl...

Around 20 coffins slid into the ravine below the cliff-side cemetery in Crotone, southern Italy, as intense rainfall caused a landslide in the lower part of the old cliff-side cemetery.
Mayor Levino Rajani said the damage of San Mauro Marchesato cemetery was a “profound wound” to the community.
“It’s a wound that affects the memory, respect and dignity of our loved ones, causing endless pain,” he said.
He said skilled climbers would recover the coffins as soon as it was safe to do so.
Sicilians had to run for their lives from towering storm-surge wave which smashed straight into the harbour while two people died in Greece and Malta experienced ice torrents, as wild weather ravages Europe.

FLOOD TRAGEDY
Woman is killed by car swept away as European city is drenched by storm

MEGA STORM
Moment locals run for their lives as streets flood on Italian holiday island
Sicily was lashed with wild weather as Cyclone Harry continues to cause havoc, prompting a state of emergency.
In what looks like a tidal wave, a street in Letojanni – north of Catania – was engulfed by flood water on Tuesday evening, with the currents taking everything in its wake.
Loose rubbish bags were the first items to be washed away in the storm, followed by chairs and heavily weighted pot plants.
In another video from Messina, giant waves are flooding the coastal city, rolling straight in from the sea.
A horrifying video shows the moment the sky becomes dark, the light blocked out by an enormous wave, before it crashed down to the shore and flooded the street.
Cyclone Harry has been wreaking havoc across the Mediterranean island, with governors pushing for the government to call a regional state of emergency, as Sicily, Calabria, and Sardinia were placed on red alert.
The island is also expecting up to 300 millimetres of rain in just two days.
Shocking videos show the moments Sicilian streets are turned into rivers, leaving residents running, with rubbish, pot plants, outdoor furniture and cars washing away.
Powerful waves submerged roads and pavements, as sea foam appeared to reach the ground floors of nearby buildings.
Passersby could also be seen wading through the water trying to get to safety.
Meanwhile in Greece, a woman tragically died while walking home from work in a horror fl....
The 56-year-old was traversing raging flood waters in her southern Athens suburb when she was knocked off her feet by the torrential water stream.
She was swept along the road, which had turned into a roaring murky river, and was eventually trapped under a parked car.
Local media report that she couldn’t get her head above the water and drowned.
She passed away despite the best efforts of witnesses who rushed to her aid but could not free her.
Authorities warned of the hazardous weather conditions which saw strong rain, thunderstorms and gale-force winds ravage overnight.
Torrential rain flooded homes and businesses across Athens and other parts of Greece.
The dangerous flow carried cars, garbage cans and debris though residential streets, submerging homes and causing extensive damage.
The fire brigade received hundreds of calls to pump water out of flooded buildings in Athens.
The Peloponnese, central Greece, the greater Athens area, Thessaly, the northern Aegean and western Macedonia have all been placed under a state of mobilisation.
Residents of Athens, Viotia and Evia have received emergency text alerts urging them to limit their movements.
Schools have also been closed in several regions.
Earlier on Wednesday, a coast guard officer was washed away by the rough sea in a port in Peloponnese, southern Greece.
“Ηe fell into the sea while he was trying tie up a small boat in the harbour,” said a coast guard official.
The rainstorm is expected to move to the eastern part of the country later in the week.
Malta, a Mediterranean hotspot usually associated with bright blue skies and beautiful coastlines, experienced the severe storm over the weekend.
Dramatic video shows rivers of mini icebergs flowing down streets and large accumulation of hail trapping cars.
Authorities can be seen working furiously to clear the roads, with diggers shovelling heaps of ice off the roads.
Catastrophic’ storm with devastating ice & snow forecast from Texas to Carolinas
The western regions of Rabat and Bahrija were the most seriously affected and experienced several centimetres of hail.
The Civil Protection Department put out a warning on Sunday evening urging residents to avoid rooftops, balconies and hillsides overnight, as the country braced itself for gale-force winds.
11https://news.sky.com/story/several-missing-after-new-zealand-campsi...
Police Superintendent Tim Anderson said the number of people missing was in the "single figures" but did not provide further details on how many were affected by the slide at the base of the popular tourist spot of Mount Maunganui.
Thursday 22 January 2026 07:49, UK

Rescue efforts are under way to free people buried under rubble after landslides hit a campsite and house in New Zealand.
They were triggered by heavy rains across the east of the North Island that cut power to thousands of homes, closed roads and caused widespread damage.
The rubble hit Beachside Holiday Park in a town named after the extinct volcano - a sacred Maori site - leaving caravans strewn and damaged.
Police Superintendent Tim Anderson said the number of people missing was in the "single figures" but did not further say how many were affected.
Local media reports said children were among the missing, citing emergency management minister Mark Mitchell.


Police said two people were missing after another landslide struck a house in nearby Papamoa.
A third person was said to be missing after a vehicle was washed away north of Auckland.
Three hours after the slide, Fire and Emergency New Zealand commander William Pike said that no survivors had been recovered at Mount Maunganui.
"Members of the public... tried to get into the rubble and did hear some voices," Mr Pike told reporters. "Our initial fire crew arrived and… were able to hear the same.

"Shortly after our initial crew arrived, we withdrew everyone from the site due to possible movement and slip."
He added that no sign of life had been detected since.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon urged residents in affected areas to follow safety advice from local authorities.
"Extreme weather continues to cause dangerous conditions across the North Island," he said on social media.
"Right now, the government is doing everything we can to support those impacted."
Bay of Plenty tourism website describes Mount Maunganui as a must-visit destination on any trip to New Zealand, with "the country's best beach", which is popular for swimming, walking and other watersports.
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Niscemi, Italy
A landslide caused the collapse of a section of road along provincial road 12 , which connects Niscemi to the Gela-Catania state road , and has been impassable since last night.
"There's a landslide along the entire ridge ," explains Niscemi mayor Massimiliano Conti. Initial safety measures are underway.
As a precaution, 6 families staying in local B&Bs have been evacuated, and 2 schools have been closed.
The landslide damaged a gas main, leaving the city without a supply. There is great concern, especially among the many farmers who risk being unable to reach their properties.
“We are monitoring the situation and flying over the area," said Mayor Conti, who also asked for travel to be limited to facilitate emergency vehicles.
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