At least eight people were dead and 34 remained missing after a landslide buried more than 10 buildings in Pengshui County in China's Chongqing municipality, AP reported, while 10 people had been rescued, including two seriously injured, and more than 1,100 residents relocated [1].
Those figures belong in separate columns: missing people are not presumed dead, hospitalization does not describe every survivor's condition, and relocation is a protective act rather than a count of destroyed homes or injuries; that discipline keeps a live search from becoming a final toll as names move between official lists.
AP's account associates the collapse with persistent rain and describes unstable search conditions, but rainfall alone does not establish the complete geotechnical cause, the condition of drainage and buildings, or whether officials had usable slope warnings [1].
With no admissible X status recovered from the three documented searches, spectacle-first and negligence-first reactions remain unobserved, leaving AP's bounded rescue record stronger than any claim about platform consensus.
The next useful receipts are a reconciled missing-person list, prior inspection and warning records, safe-return criteria for relocated residents, a public reconstruction timetable, and an explanation of when rescuers can work without turning an urgent search into another casualty event, with findings later published for public review.
-- DAVID CHEN, Beijing