The death toll from a landslide at an unauthorised campsite in Malaysia rose to 26 as search and rescue teams continued to comb muddy terrain.
Several people are still missing after a predawn landslide on Friday hit the site located at an organic farm near the town of Batang Kali in Selangor state, just north of the capital Kuala Lumpur.
About 680 personnel from various agencies led by the fire and rescue department and the police are involved in the rescue operations.
On Tuesday night, the remains of a young girl were recovered, officials said.
Local police chief Suffian Abdullah said the girl is believed to be between six and 10 years of age and that she was found five metres below ground.
"When found, the victim was dressed in pink pants and shirt, sleepwear," he said at a news conference.
This brings the death toll from the landslide to 26, including eight children.
Officials said that when the landslide struck, there had been more than 90 people, most of them asleep, at the campsite near a mountain casino resort. More than 60 campers were found safe or rescued.
The farm did not have a licence to run a campsite and its operators will be punished if they are found to have broken the law, authorities have said.

Five dead, more than 70,000 evacuated in Malaysia floods
Meanwhile, at least five people were killed and more than 70,000 rushed to evacuation centres in Malaysia after monsoon-triggered floods inundated the country's north, authorities have said.
More than 31,000 people have fled their homes in Kelantan state while more than 39,000 residents have been evacuated to temporary shelters in neighbouring Terengganu after flooding began over the weekend, the official Bernama news agency said.
Emergency services officials said a total of five people had been killed.
"The water levels reached almost three metres," Muhammad Ameenudin Badrul Hisyam from Kuala Krai district in Kelantan told AFP as he cleared debris from his home after a nearby river overflowed and forced his family to flee.
Local media reported that four people died in Kelantan on Monday when three sisters were electrocuted while wading in the floodwaters and a 15-month-old boy drowned.
The fifth victim was a two-year-old girl swept away by strong currents in Terengganu on Sunday.
Additional evacuations took place in the states of Pahang, Johor and Perak, Bernama reported.
Malaysia's meteorological department forecast continuous rains through Thursday in several states, including Terengganu.
Floods are an annual phenomenon in the Southeast Asian nation of 33 million people due to the northeast monsoon that brings heavy rain from November to March.
Newly elected Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim visited affected areas and a school being used as an evacuation centre in Kelantan on Wednesday.
Mr Anwar, who is also the finance minister, said in parliament on Tuesday that the government had initially allocated 400 million Malaysian ringgit ($90 million) to the National Disaster Management Agency to deal with the emergency.
Disaster officials said they would aerially monitor the flood situation in the worst-hit areas.