Rescue workers are using drones and trained dogs to look for survivors following a massive landslide in the Venezuelan city of Las Tejerias, as the death toll rose to 25 with dozens more reported missing.
The landslide occurred on Saturday evening following heavy rains caused by Hurricane Julia, and has destroyed more than 300 homes and affected businesses in the city of 50,000 people, located along Venezuela's main industrial corridor.
Rescuers searched for survivors and workers used heavy machinery to clear debris from a hillside neighbourhood where the roads were covered with mud. Authorities said 52 people are missing.
On Monday, Vice-President Delcy Rodríguez toured the area on Monday and said three more bodies had been found, raising the death toll to at least 25 people.
She said workers still hoped to find people alive under the debris.
Residents said they only had a few minutes to abandon their homes as the avalanche of mud, rocks and tree trunks rolled down a mountain and spilled into neighbourhoods that were also flooded by five streams.
Several children have been reported as missing.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Sunday declared three days of mourning for the victims and sent rescue workers to Las Tejerias, which lies along a highway that connects Caracas to the industrial city of Valencia.
Maduro said 11 states in the country sustained damage from floods at the weekend.