The Borneo Post

Landslide at Philippine gold-mining village claims six lives, 31 injured

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At least six people were killed and 31 injured when a rain-induced landslide hit a gold-mining village in a mountainou­s region of the southern Philippine­s, officials said yesterday.

The landslide Tuesday night struck Masara in Davao de Oro province on Mindanao island, provincial disaster official Edward Macapili told AFP, destroying houses and engulfing two buses used to transport mine workers.

Rescuers were digging through mud to reach at least 20 people trapped inside the buses, Macapili said.

At least 28 people were on board the buses when the landslide hit, but eight managed to escape unhurt through the windows before the mud engulfed them, he said.

The buses had been outside a gold mine operated by the Philippine company Apex Mining in Masara village where buses drop off and pick up workers.

Aerial video showed a deep, brown gouge down the side of a forested mountain that reaches the village below where a number of houses had been destroyed.

Land above the landslide appears to have been cleared for crops.

Rescue teams from across the region have been deployed to help search the large area under mud, Macapili said.

“We have equipment but we’re mostly doing it manually because digging with backhoes is dangerous as you don’t know if there are people trapped beneath the debris,” Macapili said.

Six bodies have been pulled out so far, an official from the Maco municipal disaster agency said, but it was not clear if they were on the buses.

Among the 31 villagers injured in the landslide, two were seriously hurt and were airlifted to a hospital in Davao city for treatment, Macapili said.

A total of 46 people were reported missing, he said. It was not immediatel­y clear if that figure included the 20 trapped on the buses.

The landslide appears to have caught people by surprise.

“There was no sign that a landslide would occur because the rains stopped on Thursday and by Friday it was already sunny and hot,” Macapili said.

Macapili said an earthquake shook the village shortly after the landslide. The search effort was halted at midnight because it was too hazardous to continue, but resumed at daylight, he said.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? This handout photo obtained from the Facebook page of the Office of the Provincial Fire Marshal (OPFM) Davao de Oro shows responders conducting rescue operations at the site of a landslide in Maco, Davao de Oro.
— AFP photo This handout photo obtained from the Facebook page of the Office of the Provincial Fire Marshal (OPFM) Davao de Oro shows responders conducting rescue operations at the site of a landslide in Maco, Davao de Oro.

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