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Six missing, homes destroyed in Alaska after rain triggers landslides

By Yereth Rosen

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - Six people were missing in Haines, Alaska, on Wednesday after record rains triggered landslides that destroyed four homes in the mountainous southeast, state troopers said.

The landslide covered the area in 9 feet of mud, trees and debris, an Alaska state trooper said in a written statement.

Troopers and police evacuated residents by boat but a search for the missing was suspended late on Wednesday "due to rumbling unstable ground," the troopers said.

A National Guard helicopter will fly in rescuers, search dogs and medics from Juneau on Thursday to continue efforts after severe turbulence prevented it from flying on Wednesday.

Also helping in the search and evacuation was the U.S. Coast Guard, which said it sent a helicopter crew and a boat to Haines, and has two cutters prepared to launch.

The government of the Haines Borough, home to about 2,500 people, has issued an emergency declaration for the storm that started on Monday.

“Rain is expected to continue, and ground conditions are unstable. The potential for additional debris flows and landslides over the next 24 hours is high,” the borough statement said.

Haines is at the northern end of Alaska’s Inside Passage, a popular summer cruise-ship destination.

Multiple landslides, floods and high winds from the storm damaged other parts of southeast Alaska, officials and local news organizations reported.

The storm set several single-day rainfall records, including 4 to 5 inches in Juneau, 5.37 inches in Skagway and 9.75 inches in the tiny fishing village of Pelican, according to preliminary National Weather Service figures.

A flash-flood warning remained in effect for Haines and other sites, and dangerous conditions continued throughout southeast Alaska, the National Weather Service said in a statement.

“People should avoid being outside in forested areas and around trees and branches," the weather service said.

(Reporting by Yereth Rosen in Anchorage; Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Gerry Doyle)