At least 27 people were killed by landslides caused by heavy rains in a mountainous area of the Brazilian sate of Rio de Janeiro, authorities said Tuesday.
The heavy downpour also forced 1,466 people to leave their homes or left them homeless. The deluge began late Sunday in and around Petropolis, located 68 kilometers (42 miles) north of Rio de Janeiro, officials said.
The bodies of two boys and a girl who had been unaccounted for were found Tuesday in a stream, firefighters said.
Earlier, a local official said two rescue workers were among the dead.
Nearly 250 soldiers and Civil Defense officials have been mobilized to assist residents of the area where 21 districts are either under water or hit by landslides, according to an official statement.
Up to 390 millimeters (15 inches) of rain fell in some Petropolis districts in the space of 24 hours, when only 270 millimeters were anticipated for all of March.
Rio state governor Sergio Cabral called on residents to leave high risk areas and seek refuge in shelters provided by city authorities as the heavy rain continued.
Petropolis Mayor Rubens Bomtempo urged residents to stay indoors and warned of the possibility of more landslides.
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, who attended Tuesday's installment of Pope Francis in Rome, offered Cabral federal help to deal with the impact of the deluge.
A civil defense statement said the heavy rain also affected other Rio state towns, including Angra dos Reis, Mangaratiba, Niteroi and Teresopolis.
In January 2011, more than 900 people died in Rio state's rugged region after heavy rain spawned flooding and landslides.
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