Campers missing after landslide in northern New Zealand

New Zealand's Fire and Emergency commander William Pike said there were initially signs of life at the site of the landslide, but not recently, according to local site, Stuff.

Emergency services in New Zealand are working to locate people still missing in a landslide that hit a busy campsite at Mount Maunganui, a popular tourist spot on the northern coast of New Zealand.

Rubble barreled down on the Beachside Holiday Park at 9:30 a.m. local time on Thursday (2030 GMT/UTC Wednesday).

Hundreds of people were at the campsite, the local mayor said, with the country still on summer school holidays.

New Zealand’s Fire and Emergency commander William Pike said there were initially signs of life at the site of the landslide, but not recently, according to local site, Stuff.

Fire and Emergency Commander William Park had earlier told reporters that fire crew and other members of the public had heard voices under the rubble. 

But rescue workers had to withdraw because of the unstable ground and nobody had been rescued yet, Stuff said.

Sniffer dogs are at the scene.

Police said the number of people missing was in the single figures, with children apparently among them, local media report. 

One witness, Nix Jaques, told Radio NZ she heard an incredibly loud noise as she was ⁠about to walk up a mountain.

She saw land come down on cars and on toilet block, she said. 

“I believe there were ‌some people in ⁠the showers, and it shifted a campervan, there was a family with a campervan.”

Two other people are still missing in a separate landslide, which struck a house in neighboring Papamoa. One person was seriously injured in that in incident.