The Manila Times

Bare hands used to search for survivors

- BY MOISES CRUZ

MANILA: Rescuers used their bare hands and shovels to dig through mud on Thursday in a desperate search for survivors of a landslide in the Philippine­s as the number of missing nearly doubled to 90, an official said.

Two days after the rain-induced landslide hit the mountainou­s gold-mining village of Masara on southern Mindanao island, searchers were in a race against time and weather.

At least seven people were killed and 31 injured when the landslide destroyed houses and engulfed three buses and a jeepney waiting for workers from a gold mine on Tuesday night.

Ninety people are missing, up from the previously reported 48, disaster agency official Edward Macapili of Davao de Oro province told AFP, citing police data.

“It is everybody’s hope that people are still alive,” Macapili said.

“Our rescue team is in a hurry because every second counts when it comes to human life.”

The landslide left a deep, brown gouge down the mountain. Rescuers pulled a person alive from the mud 11 hours after it hit, Macapili said.

“So there’s a chance,” he added. Police, soldiers and rescuers from Davao de Oro and the adjacent Davao del Norte province have been deployed to Masara to help the search and retrieval operation.

While rescuers were using heavy earth-moving equipment in places, they had to rely on their bare hands and shovels in areas where they believed there were bodies, Macapili said.

“The soil that covered the buses was very thick — it could almost cover a two-story building,” he said.

At least 20 mine workers are believed to be entombed in the vehicles.

Landslides are frequent hazards across much of the archipelag­o nation owing to the mountainou­s terrain, heavy rainfall and widespread deforestat­ion from mining, slash-and-burn farming and illegal logging.

Rain has pounded parts of Mindanao on and off for weeks, triggering dozens of landslides and flooding that have forced tens of thousands of people into emergency shelters.

Huge earthquake­s have also destabiliz­ed the region in recent months, Science and Technology Secretary Renato Solidum said Wednesday.

Hundreds of families from Masara and four nearby villages have had to evacuate from their homes and shelter in emergency centres for fear of further landslides.

The state weather forecaster has also warned that flash floods and landslides caused by moderate to heavy rain could strike the province in the coming days.

“I’m worried that there will be more heavy rains,” Macapili said.

“Of course that will affect the operations.”

Cash aid payout

Meanwhile, Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) Assistant Secretary for Strategic Communicat­ions Romel Lopez said on Thursday that the agency is still conducting simultaneo­us payouts under the Emergency Cash Transfer (ECT) program to assist households affected by the shear line that struck Davao Region in January.

On Wednesday, February 7, a payout was held in Carmen, Davao del Norte, where 1,686 families got monetary assistance from the DSWD Field Office-11 (Davao Region).

“The continuing cash aid payout is part of the commitment of DSWD Secretary Rex Gatchalian to provide all forms of assistance to families affected by the weather disturbanc­e to enable them to resume their normal lives,” Lopez said.

Lopez stated that the Department is now shifting from food to cash assistance, in accordance with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s order to provide financial aid to affected households in addition to food assistance.

Each affected household received P9,960, for a total of P16,792,560 given for Wednesday’s financial assistance distributi­on.

Aside from Carmen, the DSWD Davao Field Office provided ECT to 500 families in Cabayangan village, Braulio E. Dujali, Davao Del Norte, on February 6.

Lopez stated that the ECT payment will continue until all families are served.

Secretary Gatchalian stated in his report to the president that the DSWD has already given 250,000 family food packs (FFPs) to the affected local government units.

According to the Philippine Atmospheri­c, Geophysica­l, and Astronomic­al Services Administra­tion (Pagasa), the shear line is the convergenc­e of cold and warm winds, which trigger rains.

 ?? PHOTO BY RENANTE NAPARAN/AFP ?? This screengrab from AFPTV aerial video footage taken on Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2024, shows the site of a landslide in Davao de Oro province on Mindanao island in the southern Philippine­s. At least five people were killed and 31 injured when a rain-induced landslide engulfed two buses and houses in a mountainou­s region of the southern Philippine­s, an official said.
PHOTO BY RENANTE NAPARAN/AFP This screengrab from AFPTV aerial video footage taken on Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2024, shows the site of a landslide in Davao de Oro province on Mindanao island in the southern Philippine­s. At least five people were killed and 31 injured when a rain-induced landslide engulfed two buses and houses in a mountainou­s region of the southern Philippine­s, an official said.

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