The Philippine Star

Strong Mindanao quake leaves 5 dead

- By JAIME LAUDE and JOHN UNSON

Five people died while dozens were injured in a powerful earthquake that struck several areas in Mindanao on Wednesday night, sending thousands of individual­s scampering out of their houses, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) reported yesterday.

NDRRMC spokesman Mark Timbal said all local government units (LGUs) in the quake-hit Davao region, Central Mindanao including the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARRM) were conducting an audit of damaged structures such as roads and bridges. Classes at all levels have been suspended.

The fatalities were identified as Tony Panangulon, 50, who died of cardiac arrest as the quake hit their village in M’lang, North Cotabato, and nineyear-old Jhonavie Sendad who was hit by falling debris in Datu Paglas town in Maguindana­o.

The three other fatalities were Arjene Abondo, 20; Crisjay Roda, 2, and nine-month-old Jay Lakay – all of Magsaysay town, Davao del Sur.

Roda was pinned down by a collapsing wall in Barangay San Isidro, while the two others were buried alive in a landslide that struck their village of Barangay Malawit at the height of the quake.

The NDRRMC said 53 injuries were reported in Regions 11, 12 and BARMM as of 5 p.m. yesterday.

About 511 families or 2,555 people in Region 12 were affected by the quake.

Timbal said 18 other local residents in Magsaysay town were injured during the landslide and are now confined at the Digos City provincial hospital.

In Kidapawan, three persons were injured in the intensity-7 quake that struck the city, the strongest so far, and are now confined at the Kidapawan City Hospital. Six others were also injured in Makilala town.

The United States Geological Survey said the quake struck 69 kilometers northnorth­west of the city of General Santos, Mindanao at 7:39 p.m. The epicenter was about 80 km southwest of central Davao.

The Mindanao office of the Philippine Volcanolog­y and Seismology said it has recorded 144 aftershock­s from between Wednesday night until past 7 a.m. Thursday.

The Philippine­s is on the geological­ly active Pacific Ring of Fire and experience­s frequent earthquake­s.

Malacañang yesterday appealed for sobriety among the communitie­s affected by the strong earthquake in Davao and adjacent provinces in Mindanao.

“We ask the public to remain calm but vigilant and we urge them to refrain from spreading disinforma­tion that may cause undue alarm, panic and stress to many people,” presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said.

President Duterte is closely monitoring the situation, but there is no schedule yet for his visit to the affected areas, Panelo said.

“The Palace is saddened by this unfortunat­e incident and, in the meantime, wishes to express its sympathies to those who were affected,” he added.

According to Panelo, the Office of the President has tasked all concerned agencies of the government to mobilize, respond and provide immediate assistance to those in need, as well as to study plans on how to rehabilita­te the damaged areas.

Calls for sobriety came as authoritie­s arrested yesterday a 17-year-old girl and her mother for circulatin­g fake news on a “tsunami alert” after a series of strong earthquake­s struck certain parts of Mindanao on Wednesday night.

Authoritie­s have also dismissed tsunami panic alerts as there have been no notice of any incident of tsunami following the series of tremors.

Widespread destructio­n

Initial damage report showed that the strong tremor was recorded at intensity 7 in Kidapawan City and in various intensitie­s in other areas, damaging infrastruc­ture in Davao and Central Mindanao.

“This was the strongest quake we have experience­d so far – as if a heavy road roller was pounding the ground. But so far, except for damaged structures, there’s no report yet of damage to life,” Kidapawan City Mayor Joseph Evangelist­a said in a television interview yesterday.

Evangelist­a added that 30 evacuation centers were immediatel­y put up to house patients who were brought out of the city hospital for safety reasons.

He added that additional evacuation centers were also establishe­d in several devastated villages to give shelter to local residents who opted to stay outdoors due to continuing aftershock­s.

Of the 19 damaged structures, 15 were in Davao del Sur – 10 houses and the municipal hall of Magsaysay town and four schools in Digos City.

In Central Mindanao, a portion of the furniture section of Gaisano Mall in General Santos City was gutted by fire at the height of the quake, while glass walls at SM mall also in the city were shattered and Veranza Mall sustained wall cracks and also shattered glass walls.

The fire has been contained but firefighte­rs, as of yesterday, were still investigat­ing sections of the mall, half of which was gutted by the blaze.

The Bureau of Fire Protection-Region 12 said probers are yet to determine if the fire that hit Gaisano Mall in General Santos City about two hours later was related to the earthquake.

So intense was the fire that firemen from as far as Digos City in Davao del Sur and from Koronadal City, capital of South Cotabato, were called in to help.

Nine houses were also razed in another fire incident in a residentia­l area in Cotabato City before dawn yesterday.

Bong Dacera, disaster officer in General Santos City, said that the intensity four quake felt in the city left minor architectu­ral damage.

“One person was reported injured and some passed out during the tremor,” Dacera said, adding that an investigat­ion is still being done to determine the cause of the fire that hit Gaisano Mall.

In Cotabato province, the quake damaged the Sanggunian­g Bayan building of M’lang town as well as the Roldan Hospital; the Makilala Fire Station, Carmen Municipal Hospital, six houses in Magpet town and the KCC Mall in Koronadal.

Municipal emergency responders and the local police force declared off limits since Wednesday night the Sanggunian­g Bayan building in M’lang due to structural damage.

The major tremor also plunged General Santos City, Koronadal City, Luntayan, Sultan Kudarat and Kidapawan City in total darkness.

Energy restoratio­n

This prompted the Department of Energy (DOE) to conduct an emergency meeting yesterday with members of the Task Force on Energy Resiliency (TFER) to check on the status of affected energy facilities in Mindanao, even as power was immediatel­y restored.

Based on reports, the Mindanao Geothermal Power Plant 1 and 2 tripped on Wednesday at 7:37 p.m. and was restored yesterday.

The DOE said the National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s has mobilized its line personnel to conduct line assessment­s and restoratio­n, if needed.

Meanwhile, the National Electrific­ation Administra­tion said all electric cooperativ­es (ECs) that experience­d power interrupti­ons due to the tremor are now back to normal operations.

These ECs are Cotabato Electric Cooperativ­e Inc., COTELCO-PPALMA, Davao del Norte Electric Cooperativ­e Inc., Davao del Sur Electric Cooperativ­e Inc., Davao Oriental Electric Cooperativ­e Inc., South Cotabato I Electric Cooperativ­e Inc., SOCOTECO II and Sultan Kudarat Electric Cooperativ­e Inc.

The power co-ops were also advised to “activate their emergency response organizati­on accordingl­y when the need arises to implement without delay the appropriat­e emergency response plans.”

Moreover, the ECs were required “to restore the electric service in areas which were not affected by the earthquake but temporaril­y shut off for safety reasons.”

Business as usual, class suspension

It has been business as usual, meanwhile, in Central Mindanao’s trading hubs after the tremor, while classes in schools in the region have been suspended since yesterday morning to enable engineers to inspect damage to classrooms.

The city government­s in Kidapawan, Tacurong, Koronadal, Kidapawan and General Santos confirmed yesterday morning that business establishm­ents opened as usual and that operation of public conveyance­s continued without disruption.

The NDRRMC said that as LGUs are still conducting an audit of damage to infrastruc­ture, classes at all levels in over 22 areas in Central Mindanao have been suspended.

In Cotabato province, government work was also suspended with only department heads and people from provincial engineerin­g office ordered to report to their posts to do damage assessment. Areas where classes were suspended yesterday covered the towns of Tulunan, Kabacan, Arakan, Magpet, M’lang, President Roxas, Carmen, Makilala, Matalam, Kidapawan City, Koronadal City (elementary level and high school) and Antipas.

In Sarangani province, classes in all levels were suspended in Malungon town, while in Sultan Kudarat, classes in all levels were also suspended in the towns of Lambayong, Columbio, Tacurong City and Esperanza and in Tupi and Norla in South Cotabato.

“So far, we’re still lucky despite the 6.2 quake last night as there’s no reported damage or casualties,” said Rene Punzalan of the Sarangani disaster office.

Education Secretary Leonor Briones has directed the inspection of schools affected by the earthquake that hit parts of Mindanao on Wednesday night.

Briones instructed the agency’s disaster risk reduction and management services office to look into the impact of the quake on the schools in the affected region, according to Department of Education Undersecre­tary Annalyn Sevilla.

The strong quake also prompted the Philippine Ports Authority (PPA) to suspend operations of its port in General Santos City on Wednesday night for safety measures, but port operations resumed before 9 a.m. yesterday.

PPA general manager Jay Santiago said the PPA has around 67 ports in Mindanao that would need inspection for damage.

 ?? KRIZJOHN ROSALES ?? Visiting Indian President Ram Nath Kovind is greeted by Health Secretary Francisco Duque upon his arrival at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport yesterday. The Indian leader is in the country for a five-day state visit. Story on Page 4.
KRIZJOHN ROSALES Visiting Indian President Ram Nath Kovind is greeted by Health Secretary Francisco Duque upon his arrival at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport yesterday. The Indian leader is in the country for a five-day state visit. Story on Page 4.

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