Awwal 24, 1432 H/Feb 27, 2011, SPA -- Heavy rains caused a hilltop to collapse in a poor neighborhood of the Bolivian capital Sunday, cracking roads, destroying at least 400 homes and burying people's belongings under mud and debris, according to AP. There were no fatalities but significant damage from the landslide in the barrio of Callapa, La Paz Mayor Luis Revilla said. Edwin Herrera, a city government spokesman, called Sunday's slide the worst that La Paz has ever seen _ and he said the earth was still moving downhill. «So far we are talking about 5,000 (people) affected, but the slide is affecting neighborhoods in lower areas,» he said. Residents began evacuating late Saturday when the hill, saturated after prolonged rains, began sliding and cracks appeared in streets and homes. «My neighbors were running around and told me to get out,» said Maria Elena Siles, the mother of three adolescent children. «I looked out the window and there were no more homes to the left or the right of mine.» Siles was able to flee before the hill collapsed entirely early Sunday. By day, amid a persistent drizzle, some residents scrambled over the unstable terrain to try to rescue furniture and other possessions from the muck. But continued earth movements brought down more homes, and police cordoned off the area, saying it was too dangerous. Siles' homes was one of those destroyed. «I lost everything,» she said. «They won't let us go back in for fear of more slides.» Meanwhile, crews with heavy equipment were trying to keep the earth from backing up a river channel. Defense Minister Ruben Saavedra said soldiers were mobilized to aid evacuation and recovery efforts. A hilltop cemetery was split in two when an enormous crack opened in the ground. Heavy rains are blamed for 44 deaths around the country in recent weeks. Officials initially reported around 100 houses destroyed but later determined that 400 were wiped out over an area covering 200 to 250 acres (80 to 100 hectares), Herrera said. Slides are common in La Paz, perched at about 11,900 feet (3,640 meters) above sea level and surrounded by hills covered with poor communities. Another collapse a little over a week ago destroyed 20 homes.