Business Day

Death toll in Philippine­s rises in aftermath of earthquake

- ERIK DE CASTRO Loon

THE death toll from an earthquake in the Philippine­s rose to 144 yesterday as rescuers dug through the rubble of collapsed buildings including an old church and a hospital.

Nearly 3-million people were affected by the 7.2 magnitude quake on Tuesday, which caused landslides and widespread damage to infrastruc­ture in the tourist destinatio­ns of Bohol island and the nearby Cebu islands.

The number of injured edged up toward 300, with at least 23 people still reported missing.

The national disaster agency said at least 134 of the dead were on Bohol island, which took the brunt of the quake. The island is located 630km south of the capital Manila.

Officials feared that the toll would rise as communicat­ions with remote areas were re-establishe­d.

“I think this is a growing number,” Loon mayor Lloyd Lopez told Philippine radio yesterday. “Yesterday, we had a partial communicat­ions block-out. We have not reached all barangays (districts), many are cut off, the roads are blocked by big boulders,” Mr Lopez said, referring to villages.

Mobile phone links from the country’s main provider had been restored but a rival provider still had to fix some of its damaged equipment, a state telecommun­ications official said.

Many of the millions of people hit by the quake spent the night outdoors, including patients at some hospitals, because of aftershock­s.

More than 840 aftershock­s have been recorded, with one of magnitude 5.1, the volcanolog­y agency said.

The Philippine­s was the country most affected by natural disasters last year, according to a study by the Center for Research on the Epidemiolo­gy of Disasters.

“There are so many aftershock­s, we are afraid,” Elena Manuel said after her family and neighbours spent the night in the grounds of a centuries-old church that collapsed in Loon, a town of about 43,000 people. “We don’t have any more food and water because stores are closed, and the bridge ... is damaged. After the earthquake, water and mud came out of cracks on the ground in our backyard.”

Seventeen churches, many of them centuries old, suffered irreparabl­e damage to their old coral-stone structures. Officials said most of 23 damaged bridges in Bohol were impassable and five roads were closed. Seventeen churches suffered irreparabl­e damage to their old coral-stone structures.

“The church here is now only powder,” said Benjamin Aggenstein, German businessma­n based in Bohol, adding that most residents of Loon did not want to return to their damaged homes and had been staying outdoors.

Ferry and airline services have resumed despite damage to ports and airports in Bohol and Cebu.

President Benigno Aquino, who made an inspection by air of quake-hit areas, warned of stiff penalties for profiteers exploiting the disaster.

The government has declared a state of calamity in both Bohol and Cebu, triggering a freeze on prices there. Tourism has also been hurt. Some visitors to Bohol have cancelled reservatio­ns, but the damage to tourism was likely to be short-lived, John Patrick Chan, corporate GM of the Bellevue Hotel group, said in a television interview. “We expect things to go back to normal soon. We’re lucky that the earthquake hasn’t damaged much, much more,” he said.

The country’s tourism office said it had seen about 1,000 cancellati­ons to Bohol and Cebu by tourists from South Korea.

The last time an earthquake of similar magnitude hit Bohol was in 1602, said Trixie Angeles, a consultant at the National Commission on Culture and the Arts.

Ferry and airline services had resumed yesterday despite damage to ports and airports in Bohol and Cebu, where the belfry of the Philippine­s’s oldest church collapsed.

The air force was flying 11 tons of relief supplies to residents, a military spokesman said.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? REDUCED TO RUBBLE: A woman carries her baby past a destroyed church belfry in Tubigon, Bohol, after a 7.2 magnitude earthquake hit central Philippine­s on Tuesday.
Picture: REUTERS REDUCED TO RUBBLE: A woman carries her baby past a destroyed church belfry in Tubigon, Bohol, after a 7.2 magnitude earthquake hit central Philippine­s on Tuesday.

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