Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘Like 32 Hiroshima bombs’

Quake kills at least 97 in Bohol and Cebu

- By Inquirer Visayas, Jeannette I. Andrade and Nikko Dizon LOBOC VICE MAYOR PABLIO SUMAMPONG/CONTRIBUTO­R

AN EARTHQUAKE with energy equivalent to “32 Hiroshima bombs” jolted the Visayas, and parts of Mindanao and southern Luzon early Tuesday morning, causing centuries-old churches and modern buildings to crumble, disrupting power and phone services, setting off stampedes and killing at least 97 people.

LOBOC TOWER This is what remains of the historic Church of San Pedro tower in Loboc, Bohol province, after amajor 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck the region on Tuesday, leaving scores dead and destroying churches and buildings in and around one of the Philippine­s’ major tourist hubs.

The nuclear bomb dropped over Hiroshima, Japan, on Aug. 6, 1945, packed power equal to 20,000 tons of TNT.

The 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck at 8:12 a.m. with its epicenter at 2 kilometers southeast of Carmen town in Bohol province, known for its chocolate hills and tarsiers.

Offices and schools were closed for a national holiday—the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha—whichmay have saved lives.

Bohol and Cebu have declared a state calamity as the death toll rose to 97 in the two provinces, including a 9-year-old girl who died in a stampede that broke out at the queue for the cash transfer program in Pinamungah­an town, Cebu.

President Aquino will fly to Bohol and Cebu today to check on the damage caused by the quake.

“I will be going to Bohol and Cebu tomorrow, and if possible other areas. And if our assessment is there are a lot of other things that are not being taken care of, then we will reconsider the (Korea) visit. But as of this time, the things that have to be done are being done,” the President told reporters.

Senior Supt. Dennis Agustin, the Bohol police chief, reported 87 fatalities in the province based on an actual body count. At least nine others were killed in nearby Cebu province and another died on Siquijor Island, according to field reports.

Agustin said Loon town accounted for at least 20 fatalities; San Isidro and Sagbayan, nine fatalities each; Balilihan, Calape and Antequerra, five fatalities each; Tubigon, Inabanga, Bilar and Catigbian, four fatalities each; and Maribojoc, three fatalities.

Agustin said the towns of Clarin, Buenavista, Loay and Albor had two fatalities each. Tagbilaran City also had the same number of fatalities.

The towns of Getafe, Batu-an, Baclayon, Cortes and Talibon each had one fatality.

Mr. Aquino presided over an hourlong closed-door executive session of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) at the Office of Civil Defense.

Combined figures from the Bohol provincial police and the NDRRMC showed that at least 164 people were injured in the province.

East Bohol Fault

The Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology (Phivolcs) said the movement of the East Bohol Fault triggered the strongest quake in the Visayas in 23 years.

Phivolcs Director Renato Solidum placed the depth of the tectonic tremor at 33 kilometers.

The US Geological Survey initially reported the quake as having a magnitude of 7.2, but shortly afterward lowered it to 7.1.

By noon, Phivolcs had recorded 137 aftershock­s in Carmen and Tagbilaran, the strongest of which was magnitude 4.3 at 9:37 a.m. Intensity IV was felt in Tagbilaran.

Magnitude is themeasure­ment of the energy released by the earthquake, while intensity measures the extent of damage caused by the quake.

Limestone church crumbled

Many roads and bridges were reported damaged, but historic churches dating from the Spanish colonial period suffered the most. Among them is the country’s oldest, the 16th-century Basilica of the Holy Child in Cebu, which lost its bell tower.

A 17th-century limestone church in Loboc town, southwest of Carmen, crumbled to pieces, with nearly half of it reduced to rubble.

Bohol Administra­tor Alfonso Damalerio said two other churches in Maribojoc and Loon were destroyed.

The Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council of Bohol also received reports of damage to old churches in Loay, Clarin and Baclayon as well as the belfry in Panglao.

Photos on social media showed extensive damage not only to churches but also to modern buildings, including a university, while major roads had also been torn apart.

In the immediate aftermath of the quake, authoritie­s were struggling to reach or contact damaged areas, with power lines as well as phone networks down, and a clear picture of the disaster had yet to emerge.

Neil Sanchez, head of the Cebu disaster management office, said authoritie­s were trying to confirm reports that a school had collapsed, with an undetermin­ed number of children trapped.

“Communicat­ion lines are quite difficult here. Even the disaster risk reduction management office has been damaged. We had to move elsewhere,” Sanchez said.

Businesses in Cebu were on a standstill as people rushed out of buildings, homes and hospitals.

Malls and several establishm­ents closed down for the day to allow engineers to check on their buildings. They are expected to resume operations onWednesda­y.

Classes, flights suspended

Cebu declared a state of calamity and suspended classes in both private and public schools on Wednesday to allow school officials to check on the buildings.

Operations at Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport and Bohol’s Tagbilaran airport were halted after the quake struck, as airport safety authoritie­s conducted safety checks.

By 10:30 a.m. on Tuesday, both airports resumed operations. John Andrews of the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippine­s said damage was reported at both locations. In the case of Tagbilaran, the second floor ceiling of the terminal collapsed but the debris was already cleared, he said.

Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. and Globe Telecom said service in earthquake-hit areas continued but noted that operations were likely hindered by the lack of power and damage to their facilities. The companies said engineers are working to restore services.

Ports operations resumed at 1 p.m. after the Coast Guard Cebu Station commander, Weniel Azcuna, lifted a suspension order. He, however, urged passengers bound for Bohol to take the boat to the province’s Tubigon town because the passenger terminal in Tagbilaran was damaged.

Bridge collapsed

Bohol Gov. Edgar Chatto said the Abatan Bridge that connected Maribojoc to Tagbilaran City had collapsed. But an alternativ­e route in Antequerra town can be used.

The highway in Cortes particular­ly in Lilo-an was rendered impassable due to a landslide. A part of Cortes’ highway was also damaged.

Municipal halls in Sagbayan was destroyed while the municipal hall in Clarin was damaged.

In Cebu, nine persons were reported killed in the cities of Cebu, Talisay and Mandaue, and in the towns of Ronda and Pinamungah­an.

Four people were killed when a portion of the ceiling of the Pasil Fish Market collapsed. Only three fatalities were identified—Leona Cabarrubia­s, Rondilino Bondoc and Condrado Perez.

Cabarrubia­s was identified by her son-inlaw, Douglas Encabo, who went looking for her in the market which was cordoned by the police.

Encabo said his mother-in-law was selling fish in the market when the tragedy happened.

Reports from Cebu City said 53 people were brought to Cebu City Medical Center (CCMC) forminor cuts and bruises.

Patients evacuated

At least 250 patients of CCMC were evacuated after cracks were found in the hospital. Most of the patients were transferre­d to the nearby Pahina Central gym. Others stayed under the tents placed on the sidewalk near CCMC.

Eight patients with critical cases were brought to the other hospitals.

A fatality in Cebu City, Aurora Abellar Repe, 64, died after she was hit by a concrete wall in Barangay Sawang Calero.

Stampede

Four-year-old Shaisha Mia Patiluna was killed in a stampede on Tuesday morning when people panicked after they felt the earth shaking while they were lining up to receive cash assistance from the government’s Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) in Pinamungah­an town, Cebu.

A separate stampede also occurred in Toledo City where the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t personnel were distributi­ng the cash doles when the earthquake hit. At least 20 people were hurt.

Ethel Natera, informatio­n officer of the provincial government, identified two of the fatalities as Mordencia Lumera, 80, of Ronda town and Leio Planos of Talisay.

She said Planos was killed while his two companions were wounded when their vehicle was hit by falling debris in Talisay.

Awoman was also killed after she was hit by a glass decor at the fish section of the new public market in Barangay Centro, Mandaue City.

Roger Paller, Mandaue informatio­n officer, said 39 others were wounded by glass shards.

At least 3,000 people from Cebu City’s coastal barangays were evacuated to nearby gyms and church grounds. These were in Pasil, Sawang Calero, Duljo Fatima and San Nicolas.

INC towers destroyed

Two towers of Iglesia ni Cristo (INC) on General Maxilum Avenue in Cebu City collapsed while cracks were found on the walls of Fort San Pedro, the Bureau of Customs building and approaches to the flyover in Barangay Mambaling. In Iloilo, two persons were hurt. One of them was a 50-year-old woman who fell from a scaffoldin­g while overseeing repairs at her home in Barangay Tabuc Suba in Jaro District.

Iloilo City Mayor Jed Patrick Mabilog ordered the suspension of classes to allow the inspection of school buildings for damage and structural integrity.

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INQSNAP this page (not just the logo) to view more photos and an interactiv­e map.
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POOLE’S TWITTER ACCOUNT ?? CHOCOLATEH­ILLS The observatio­n deck used to view Bohol’s famous Chocolate Hills lies in ruins after the earthquake. Inset is one of the hills.
PHOTOS FROM ROBERT MICHAEL POOLE’S TWITTER ACCOUNT CHOCOLATEH­ILLS The observatio­n deck used to view Bohol’s famous Chocolate Hills lies in ruins after the earthquake. Inset is one of the hills.
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