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Abstract:Media playback is unsupported on your device Media captionSurvivors were pulled from the muddy tor
Media playback is unsupported on your device
Media captionSurvivors were pulled from the muddy torrent after the dam collapsed
At least 300 people are missing after a dam collapsed at an iron ore mine in south-eastern Brazil, officials say.
The break caused a sea of muddy sludge that buried the dam's cafeteria where workers were eating lunch.
Rescue teams used earth-moving machinery at the site near the town of Brumadinho, in Minas Gerais state.
State governor Romeu Zema said there was little chance of finding people alive. So far nine people have been confirmed dead.
It is not clear what caused the collapse of the dam, owned by Brazil's largest mining company, Vale.
In pictures: Aftermath of dam collapse
The 2015 dam disaster in Minas Gerai
The collapse comes just over three years since a dam burst in Mariana, also in Minas Gerais, killing 19 people, in what is considered Brazil's worst environmental disaster.
What do we know about the collapse?
The dam near Feijão iron ore mine burst its barrier at around 13:00 local time (15:00 GMT) on Friday, flooding another dam down below.
The torrent of sludge cut through the dam's complex, nearby farms and the neighbourhood where many of the workers live, destroying houses and vehicles.
The Glogo website later reported that rescue officials provided the following breakdown on the number of the missing:
Between 100 and 150 people in the administrative area close to the burst dam
About 30 people in the Vila Vértico area
About 35 people at Nova Estancia I
Between 100 and 140 people in the Parque das Cachoeira
Dozens of trapped people, many of them covered in mud, had to be evacuated by helicopter as roads were destroyed.
Many other residents have been evacuated as a safety measure.
Interactive
Dam collapse in Brazil
25 January 2019
Earlier this month
The company's chief executive Fabio Schvartsman said only one-third of the roughly 300 workers at the site had been accounted for.
Local firefighters also said the number of missing in the area could be as many as 300.
“I'm anxious, I want news,” 28-year-old Helton Pereira told the BBC as he waited outside a hospital in nearby Belo Horizonte - his 28-year-old wife and 35-year-old sister worked at the dam's cafeteria and were both missing.
The search is being carried out by 100 firefighters with 100 more expected to join them on Saturday.
“From now, the odds are minimal and it's most likely we'll recover only bodies,” Governor Zema said.
Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption The dam is owned by Brazil's largest mining company, Vale
Built in 1976, the dam was one of several in the area and it was used to hold residue from the mine.
It had capacity for 12m cubic metres and had been an inactive site for three years, Vale said.
What has the reaction been?
President Jair Bolsonaro said he would fly to the affected area on Saturday.
“Our main concern at this moment is attending to potential victims of this grave tragedy,” he said on Twitter.
The environment, mining and regional development ministers were also travelling to the region.
Vale chief executive Fabio Schvartsman called it a “human tragedy” and said a German company, hired to assess the dam, indicated in the most recent report last September that it was stable.
The firm said it was monitoring all its other dams.
A report by Folha de S.Paulo newspaper said the risk of collapse of the dam had been mentioned in a “tense meeting” that approved its licence last month (in Portuguese).
Image copyrightReutersImage caption Roads have been destroyed by the sludge, complicating rescue effort
The environmental activist group Greenpeace said the dam break was a sad consequence of the lessons not learned by the Brazilian government and the mining companies."
It said the incidents “are not accidents but environmental crimes that must be investigated, punished and repaired”.
What happened in 2015?
On 5 November 2015, a dam - also owned by Vale, along with BHP Billiton - burst at a Samarco mine in Mariana.
More than 60m cubic metres - enough to fill 20,000 Olympic swimming pools - spilled over into the surrounding area.
After a lengthy court case, BHP Billiton and Vale reached a settlement worth at least 6.8bn reais ($1.8bn) with the Brazilian government.
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