Landslides in Malaysia
Landslides in Malaysia are regular natural disasters in Malaysia which occur along hillsides and steep slopes.
Events
- 1 May 1961 - A landslide occurred in Ringlet, Cameron Highlands, Pahang.
- 21 October 1993 The man-made Pantai Remis landslide caused a new cove to be formed in the coastline.
- 11 December 1993 - 48 people were killed when a block of the Highland Towers collapsed at Taman Hillview, Ulu Klang, Selangor.
- 30 June 1995 - 20 people were killed in the landslide at Genting Highlands slip road near Karak Highway.
- 6 January 1996 - A landslide in the North-South Expressway (NSE) near Gua Tempurung, Perak.
- 29 August 1996 - A mudflow near Pos Dipang Orang Asli settlement in Kampar, Perak, 44 people were killed in this tragedy.
- 15 May 1999 - A landslide near Bukit Antarabangsa, Ulu Klang, Selangor. Most of the Bukit Antarabangsa civilians were trapped under the rubble. Only two victims survived - an Indonesian maid and a child.
- 20 November 2002 - The bungalow of the Affin Bank chairman General (RtD) Tan Sri Ismail Omar collapsed due to an early morning landslide in Taman Hillview, Ulu Klang, Selangor, with a fatality in his family.
- December 2003 - A rockfall in the New Klang Valley Expressway (NKVE) near the Bukit Lanjan interchange caused the expressway to be closed for more than six months.
- 31 May 2006 - Four persons were killed in the landslides at Kampung Pasir, Ulu Klang, Selangor.
- 26 December 2007 – Two villagers were buried alive in a major landslide, which destroyed nine wooden houses in Lorong 1, Kampung Baru Cina, Kapit, Sarawak.
- 12 February 2009 - one contract worker was killed in a landslide at the construction site for a 43-storey condominium in Bukit Ceylon, Kuala Lumpur.
- 21 May 2011 - 16 people mostly 15 children and a caretaker of an orphanage were killed in a landslide caused by heavy rains at the Children's Hidayah Madrasah Al-Taqwa orphanage in FELCRA Semungkis, Hulu Langat, Selangor.
- 29 Dec 2012 - 88 residents of bungalows, shophouses and double-storey terrace houses in the Puncak Setiawangsa, Kuala Lumpur were ordered to move out because of soil movement. Resident Siti Mahfudzah Shahril, 34, said she was shocked at the sound of a siren and rushed out to see a landslide of about 50m high.
- 04 Jan 2013 - Construction at the Kingsley Hill housing project at Putra Heights has been halted temporarily following a landslide at the site that caused several vehicles to be submerged in mud.. No update if this affects the progress of the construction of Kingsley International school, located at the other side of this hill.