A large chunk of a motorway in southwest Sweden collapsed overnight, causing three people to be taken to hospital with light injuries, police said on Saturday.
The landslide damaged the motorway between Sweden's second-biggest city, Gothenburg and Norway's capital, Oslo, near the small town of Stenungsund, around 50 km north of Gothenburg on Sweden's west coast.
"The hardest hit parts of the landslide area measure around 150 x 100 metres. In total, however, the landslide has affected an area of around 700 x 200 meters," the Gothenburg Rescue Services said in a statement.
The rescue services said the slide affected around ten vehicles, a wooded area, a business area with a gas station and a fast food restaurant.
"A number of people have been helped out of vehicles in the slide area with the help of fire personnel and a helicopter."
Swedish news agency TT reported that several cars and one truck had fallen into holes and cracks caused by the landslide.
A rescue services spokesperson told public broadcaster SVT all people in the vehicles had been helped out.
Police said on their website they had launched a probe into whether work at a nearby construction site may have caused the slide.
"It's still unclear if there is any connection to blasting/work at the site and the landslide," they said. "No person is currently suspected of a crime."
The rescue services said specially trained staff and search dogs would now search the area and that further slides could not be ruled out.


Russian drone strike kills 12 miners in Ukraine
Reopening of Gaza's Rafah crossing expected Monday
Winter storm death toll in United States reaches 90
Pakistan says 145 militants killed after attacks in Balochistan
Israeli strikes kill 26 in Gaza, health officials say
US government starts likely brief shutdown as House fails to approve deal
Thousands demonstrate in Minnesota and across US to protest ICE
France tightens infant milk rules after recalls
