China Daily

Death toll of landslides climbs to 85

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MANILA, The Philippine­s — The death toll from landslides and devastatin­g floods in the central Philippine­s triggered by a tropical depression climbed to 85, officials said on Wednesday, as rescuers reached cutoff communitie­s.

The country’s national disaster agency said in its latest report that at least 20 people are still missing and the death is expected to rise.

The casualties, including young children, were mostly killed when their homes collapsed in landslides after days of heavy rain in several provinces in the central Philippine­s, said Ricardo Jalad, executive director of the national disaster agency.

“If we don’t recover the missing or we recover them dead, that is 105 deaths, which we hope not,” Jalad said.

He also said that it was basically because people, especially the local government­s, neglected the dangers of the heavy rains.

“We’ve sent numerous advisories. If they followed it, conducted pre-emptive evacuation in these areas, the number (of fatalities) should have been lower,” he said.

“But their pre-emptive evacuation is low … The people did not have a full understand­ing of the effects on the soil of extended rains,” said Jalad.

“The advisory warned of heavy rains, flooding. It advised (the people) to be careful against flooding in low-lying areas and landslides in the mountainou­s areas. However, the evacuation protocol is the call of the local government­s’ chief executives. We only give them advisories about what will happen in their areas but it’s their call to evacuate people,” he added.

The tropical depression, which weakened into a low pressure system before leaving the Philippine­s on Sunday, brought heavy rain that triggered landslides and flooding in the Bicol and eastern Visayas regions.

Officials put three provinces under a “state of calamity” to give them access to emergency funds.

Bicol, with a population of 5.8 million, was the hardest hit, with 68 killed in intense rains and landslides. Damage to agricultur­e in Bicol, which produces rice and corn, was estimated at 342 million pesos ($6.5 million).

Rescuers, including the police and military, used heavy-lifting equipment to clear roads leading to landslide sites and entered flooded communitie­s using rubber boats.

“The sun is already out, with occasional light rains. We hope floods will subside,” Ronna Monzon, a member of the operations personnel at the disaster agency in Bicol, said.

About 20 tropical cyclones hit the Philippine­s every year, with destroyed crops and infrastruc­ture taking a toll on human lives and weighing down one of the fastest growing economies in Asia.

The national disaster agency said more than 45,000 families or nearly 192,000 people from 457 areas in the Philippine­s were affected by the tropical depression that hit on Dec 29.

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