(Recasts to add details) By Varsha Tickoo KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 7 (Reuters) - Malaysian police on Sunday called off a search for more victims of a landslide near the capital that killed four people, forced thousands out of their homes and cut electricity supplies, local media said. "There are no indications that there are still victims buried or trapped in the landslide," Selangor police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said, according to state news agency Bernama. The landslide struck in an affluent suburb in Selangor state north of Kuala Lumpur early on Saturday morning, flattening 14 houses. It happened just over a week after two sleeping sisters were killed by a mudslide nearby and after two other slides in the capital. Some residents packed their belongings into cars and headed for temporary housing as the rubble was being cleared, while others struggled to get supplies to their families after tents were set up to distribute emergency supplies. "Our cars and everything are trapped inside. We are considering to go and stay with a friend," said Ngu Siong Ho, 52. Shifting earth had earlier halted the search effort which the police said had involved a thousand emergency personnel on the 10 acre site. State electricity company Tenaga Nasional said in a statement that progress restoring power had been hampered by rain and earth movements and that four of 16 transformers the slide affected had been put back online. Bernama reported 1,500 houses were without power. Environmental campaigners have repeatedly criticised the building of houses on the steep forested hills near Kuala Lumpur. When the opposition won Selangor in March's election it banned construction on slopes with more than a 25 percent incline. Construction has boomed in recent years in the state, the most affluent in this Southeast Asian nation of 27 million people. The worst disaster was in 1993 when 48 people died in the collapse of a tower block on a site 1.5 kilometres (1 mile) from Saturday's slide. "Even as recent as last month, developers were insisting that they had the right to develop hill slopes and some had told a couple of ExCo (state executive council) members that they were planning to sue us," Elizabeth Wong, a Selangor state executive council member in charge of environmental matters, said on her website (http://elizabethwong.wordpress.com/) on Sunday. (Reporting by Varsha Tickoo; Editing by Jerry Norton)
A rescuer inspects a residence damaged by a landslide in Kuala Lumpur December 7, 2008. A landslide killed three people in a suburb of the Malaysian capital early on Saturday, tearing ...