Survivors of a powerful earthquake that killed more than 150 people in the Visayas rummaged Wednesday through ruins for friends and relatives, as rescue workers struggled to reach isolated communities.
Heavy equipment remained unavailable so rescuers used manual tools to dig through and lift heavy debris.
The 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck the central island of Bohol on
Tuesday morning, ripping apart bridges, tearing down centuries-old
churches and triggering landslides that engulfed entire homes.
The number of people confirmed killed on Bohol and neighboring
provinces climbed from 93 on Tuesday to 158 on Thursday as the full
scale of the disaster became clear, and there were no tales of miracle
rescues.
At Loon, a small coastal town of about
40,000 people just 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the epicenter of the
earthquake, shocked survivors used their bare hands to scour through the
rubble of their homes.
"We're trying our best
to keep hopes up, but in this desperate situation there is nothing much
we can do beyond giving comforting words," local priest Father Tomas
Balakayo told AFP as he stood in front of Loon's destroyed limestone
church.
"I try to be strong but this is terrible, what have these people done to deserve this?"
Loon farmer Serafin Megallen said he dug with his hands,
brick-by-brick, to retrieve his mother-in-law and cousin from the rubble
of their home on Tuesday.
"They were alive but
they died of their injuries three hours later. There was no rescue that
came, we had to rely on neighbors for help," he told AFP.
With destroyed bridges, ripped-open roads and power outages fragmenting
the island of about one million people, authorities said it had proved
difficult for police and government rescue workers to reach isolated
communities on Wednesday.
Loon was one of the
most badly affected communities, with 42 people confirmed killed there
so far, according to Bohol police chief Senior Superintendent Dennis
Agustin.
But for most of Wednesday the only
people involved in the search and rescue efforts were local residents
and police, with only a few rescue workers arriving by boat, and no
heavy equipment that could have plied through the rubble.
Four people were believed to have been inside Loon's Our Lady of Light
church when it collapsed, according to Balakayo, the priest.
He said they remained unaccounted for, but locals had given up hope they were still alive.
In front of the rubble of the church an improvised altar had been
erected with a lone statue of the Virgin Mary, where teary residents
stopped by to make the sign of the cross.
Ten
churches, many of them dating back centuries to Spanish colonial rule of
the Philippines, were destroyed or badly damaged on Bohol and the
neighboring island of Cebu.
Video footage
broadcast by AFP on Wednesday showed an elderly woman narrowly avoiding
being crushed by the collapsing bell tower of the Philippines' oldest
church, Cebu's Basilica Minore de Santo Niño (Basilica of the Child
Jesus).
A report by Mariz Umali on "News To Go" Thursday morning said a team from the National Commission on the Culture and Arts (NCCA) is already in Bohol to inspect the damaged churches there, focusing on those declared six national cultural treasures.
In Cebu, at least 86 classrooms in schools need rehabilitation that may cost up to P83 million, according to state-run Philippine Information Agency.
"DepEd_PH report says 86 classrooms in Cebu need rehabilitation. Estimated cost is P83 million," the PIA Cebu office said.
The PIA said inspections showed cracks on walls and flooring, and "dismantled" parts of the ceiling in affected Cebu schools.
A report by Mariz Umali on "News To Go" Thursday morning said a team from the National Commission on the Culture and Arts (NCCA) is already in Bohol to inspect the damaged churches there, focusing on those declared six national cultural treasures.
In Cebu, at least 86 classrooms in schools need rehabilitation that may cost up to P83 million, according to state-run Philippine Information Agency.
"DepEd_PH report says 86 classrooms in Cebu need rehabilitation. Estimated cost is P83 million," the PIA Cebu office said.
The PIA said inspections showed cracks on walls and flooring, and "dismantled" parts of the ceiling in affected Cebu schools.
Most of the deaths were on Bohol, which is one of the most popular
tourist islands in the Philippines because of its beautiful beaches,
rolling Chocolate Hills and tiny tarsier primates.
The number of confirmed fatalities on Bohol jumped to 141 as
authorities in isolated towns restored communications and reported
dozens more deaths, the head of the province's information office,
Augustus Escobia, told AFP.
Nine people died on
Cebu province, home to the Philippines' second-biggest city of the same
name, while another person was confirmed killed on nearby Siquijor
island.
Survivors were further tormented on
Wednesday by incessant aftershocks, including some exceeding 5.1,
according to national disaster authorities.
President Benigno Aquino visited Bohol and Cebu to oversee rescue
efforts, and sought to reassure survivors as the number of aftershocks
surpassed 800.
"The bottom line is we do not
have to fear that something stronger than... (Tuesday's quake) is
coming," Aquino said in a nationally televised meeting with cabinet
members at Tagbilaran, Bohol's capital.
The
Philippines lies on the so-called Ring of Fire, a vast Pacific Ocean
region where many earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur.
The deadliest recorded natural disaster in the Philippines occurred in
1976, when a tsunami triggered by a 7.9-magnitude earthquake devastated
the Moro Gulf on the southern island of Mindanao.
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