RELIGION

RELIGION

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Magnitude 7.2 earthquake hits the central Philippines

 

 

 

At least 85 killed after magnitude 7.2 earthquake hits the central Philippines

  • Buildings and roads were destroyed in the earthquake at 8.12am local time
  • Epicentre of the quake is in Bohol Island where at least 57 have been killed
  • People rushed out of homes and buildings as aftershocks continued
  • Several people were killed in Cebu when terrified residents ran from homes

 

At least 85 people have been killed in the central Philippines when a 7.2 magnitude earthquake ripped through the area, destroying buildings and roads and triggering terrified stampedes.

At least 15 people died in Cebu, according to the National Disaster Agency, with some killed when they became involved in a crush as people rushed out of homes and buildings, including hospitals, as aftershocks continued.

Most of the deaths were on the neighbouring island of Bohol, which is close to the epicentre of the quake, with 69 confirmed fatalities so far.

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Rescue operation: Rescuers shift through the rubble to recover an unidentified man at a fish port in Pasil, Cebu

Rescue operation: Rescuers shift through the rubble to recover an unidentified man at a fish port in Pasil, Cebu

Injured: Doctors treat a woman outside a damaged Vicente Sotto Hospital in Cebu, following the earthquake

Injured: Doctors treat a woman outside a damaged Vicente Sotto Hospital in Cebu, following the earthquake

Earthquake: Workers use a crane to lift up a concrete block that fell on a car after buildings collapsed during an earthquake in Cebu city. At least 20 people in the Philippines have died in the earthquake

Earthquake: Workers use a crane to lift up a concrete block that fell on a car after buildings collapsed during an earthquake in Cebu city. At least 20 people in the Philippines have died in the earthquake

Damage: The 7.2 earthquake was centred about 35 miles below Carmen town on Bohol Island. Pictured is a collapsed building in Cebu city

Damage: The 7.2 earthquake was centred about 35 miles below Carmen town on Bohol Island. Pictured is a collapsed building in Cebu city

Disaster: Rescue members recover the body of a vendor killed after an earthquake hit Pasil market in Cebu City

Disaster: Rescue members recover the body of a vendor killed after an earthquake hit Pasil market in Cebu City

One other person died on nearby Siquijor.

Authorities say that the death toll could yet rise, but lives may have been saved by the fact offices and schools were closed for a national holiday. Rescue teams are still assessing damage to the worst affected area Bohol as roads have been made impassable and the power was cut.

There have been no reports so far of any foreign tourists being killed in the quake.

Scores dead as Magnitude 7.2 earthquake hits the central...

Devastating: Residents inspect a car after a concrete block fell on it during an earthquake in Cebu city

Devastating: Residents inspect a car after a concrete block fell on it during an earthquake in Cebu city

Stricken: Damaged cars lie under a rubble outside the GMC Plaza Building in Cebu following the devastating quake

Stricken: Damaged cars lie under a rubble outside the GMC Plaza Building in Cebu following the devastating quake

Destroyed: Damage to the roof and structure of the Church of San Pedro in the town of Loboc, Boho

Destroyed: Damage to the roof and structure of the Church of San Pedro in the town of Loboc, Boho

Aftermath: People walk past the damaged Church of San Pedro in Loboc, Bohol

Aftermath: People walk past the damaged Church of San Pedro in Loboc, Bohol

The earthquake, which did not cause a tsunami, struck at 8.12am local time and was centred about 35 miles below Carmen town on Bohol Island
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Five people were killed when a fishing port collapsed in Cebu city, across the strait from Bohol, officials said.

Two more people died and 19 were injured when the roof of a market in Mandaue in Cebu province collapsed. A woman died after being hit on the head when the quake toppled a building.

In ruins: A large section of the roof of the Church of San Pedro collapsed during the 7.2 magnitude quake

In ruins: A large section of the roof of the Church of San Pedro collapsed during the 7.2 magnitude quake

Horrific: Although the death toll could yet rise, officials say that fewer people are expected to have died than might normally have as schools and offices were closed for a public holiday

Horrific: Although the death toll could yet rise, officials say that fewer people are expected to have died than might normally have as schools and offices were closed for a public holiday

Looking for survivors: Filipino soldiers view damaged cars underneath rubble outside a shopping mall

Looking for survivors: Filipino soldiers view damaged cars underneath rubble outside a shopping mall

Photos from Cebu broadcast on TV stations showed a fallen concrete two-storey building, and reports said an eight-month-old baby and a second person were pulled out alive.

'It's fortunate that many offices and schools are closed due to the holiday,' said Jade Ponce, the Cebu mayor's assistant.

He said that patients were evacuated to basketball courts and other open spaces 'but we'll move them back as soon as the buildings are declared safe'.

Location: The earthquake, which struck at 8.12am local time, was centred about 35 miles below Carmen town on Bohol Island and did not cause a tsunami

Location: The earthquake, which struck at 8.12am local time, was centred about 35 miles below Carmen town on Bohol Island and did not cause a tsunami

Destruction: Residents inspect a car after a concrete block fell on it during an earthquake in Cebu city

Destruction: Residents inspect a car after a concrete block fell on it during an earthquake in Cebu city

Danger: Shoppers and traders run to safety following the earthquake in Mandaue town in Cebu City

Danger: Shoppers and traders run to safety following the earthquake in Mandaue town in Cebu City

Destroyed: Residents assess the damaged Church of San Pedro in the town Loboc, Bohol

Destroyed: Residents assess the damaged Church of San Pedro in the town Loboc, Bohol

There are said to have been at least four aftershocks measuring five on the Richter scale.

Cebu province, about 350 miles south of Manila, has a population of more than 2.6 million people.

A university, a school and two shopping malls, public markets and many small buildings sustained damage in the quake.

Several of those who died in Cebu were crushed to death in a stampede at a sports complex, where  people had gathered to collect regular government cash handouts, according to the provincial disaster council chief, Neil Sanchez.

He said two other people were killed when part of a school collapsed on a car they were parked in, while four others died at a fish market that crumbled.

Nearby Bohol has 1.2 million people and is popular among foreigners because of its beach and island resorts.

Vilma Yorong, a Bohol provincial government employee, said she was in a village hall in Maribojoc town when 'the lights suddenly went out and we felt the earthquake'.

She said: 'We ran out of the building, and outside, we hugged trees because the tremors were so strong.

'When the shaking stopped, I ran to the street and there I saw several injured people. Some were saying their church has collapsed.'

Damaged: A road is ripped apart in the town of Loboc, Bohol province, following the earthquake

Damaged: A road is ripped apart in the town of Loboc, Bohol province, following the earthquake

Tragedy: Five people were killed when a fishing port collapsed in Cebu city. A resident is pictured inspecting a collapsed building in the city

Tragedy: Five people were killed when a fishing port collapsed in Cebu city. A resident is pictured inspecting a collapsed building in the city

She said that she and the others ran up a mountain fearing a tsunami would follow the quake.

'Minutes after the earthquake, people were pushing each other to go up the hill,' she said.

Elmo Alinsunorin, a guard for a government tax office in Cebu, added: 'I was thrown to the ground by the strength of the quake. Broken glass rained on me, I thought I was going to die.'

The Philippines' oldest church, Cebu's Basilica Minore del Santo Nino, was badly damaged, according to a civil defence spokesman.

It was first built in the 1500s by Spanish colonisers, although its current stone structure dates back to the 1700s.

A church on Bohol that was first built in the early 1600s also collapsed, according to Robert Michael Poole, a British tourist who was visiting the area.

Wreck: A security guard walks past the bell tower church of historic Basilica Minore of Sto Nino that fell down during the earthquake

Wreck: A security guard walks past the bell tower church of historic Basilica Minore of Sto Nino that fell down during the earthquake

Crumbled: Debris lies close to the historic church after much of it was destroyed in the earthquake and subsequent aftershocks

Crumbled: Debris lies close to the historic church after much of it was destroyed in the earthquake and subsequent aftershocks

'It's absolutely devastated, the entire front of the church has collapsed onto the street,' Poole told AFP by telephone.

However he said there was nobody in the church at the time of the quake.

A church was reportedly damaged in the provincial capital of Tagbilaran and a part of the city hall collapsed, injuring one person.

Still keeping guard: A Filipino security guard stands next to the rubble of the historic church of Santo Nino Cathedral

Still keeping guard: A Filipino security guard stands next to the rubble of the historic church of Santo Nino Cathedral

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

Other old churches dating from the Spanish colonial period, which are common in the central region, also reported damage, including the bell tower of the centuries-old Santo Nino Church in Cebu, which collapsed.

Today is a national holiday for the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha, and that may have reduced casualties.

Natural disaster: Lives may have been saved by the fact offices and schools were closed for a national holiday. Pictured is damage to the Basilica of the Holy Child in Cebu City

Natural disaster: Lives may have been saved by the fact offices and schools were closed for a national holiday. Pictured is damage to the Basilica of the Holy Child in Cebu City

Historic: The bell tower of the centuries-old Santo Nino Church in Cebu collapsed in the natural disaster

Historic: The bell tower of the centuries-old Santo Nino Church in Cebu collapsed in the natural disaster

Holiday: Today is a national holiday for the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha, and that may have reduced casualties. Pictured is damage to the Historic Basilica Minor of Sto Nino de Cebu

Holiday: Today is a national holiday for the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha, and that may have reduced casualties. Pictured is damage to the Historic Basilica Minor of Sto Nino de Cebu

The earthquake also was deep below the surface, unlike the 6.9-magnitude one last year in waters near Negros Island, also in the central Philippines, that killed nearly 100 people.

Regional military commander Lt Gen Roy Deveraturda said that he recalled soldiers from the holiday break to respond to the quake.

He said it damaged the pier in Tagbilaran and caused some cracks at Cebu's international airport but that navy ships and air force planes could use alternative ports to help out.

Passenger flights were put on hold until officials check runways and buildings for damage.

Earthquakes are common in the Philippines, which lies along the Pacific 'Ring of Fire'.

The deadliest recorded natural disaster in the Philippines occurred in 1976, when a tsunami triggered by a magnitude 7.9 earthquake devastated the Moro Gulf on the southern island of Mindanao.

Between 5,000 and 8,000 people were killed, according to official estimates.

Rescuers pull a man from the rubble in Cebu on October 15.Rescuers pull a man from the rubble in Cebu on October 15.

People gather outside damaged buildings in Cebu on October 15.People gather outside damaged buildings in Cebu on October 15.

 

 

 

 

Powerful Earthquake Strikes the Philippines

OCT 16, 2013 |

On Tuesday, a 7.2 magnitude earthquake shook Bohol province in the central Philippines, tearing up roads, collapsing hundreds of structures -- including more than a dozen historic churches -- and claiming more than 140 lives. All but two of the 20 bridges on Bohol Island were destroyed, hampering rescue efforts. Residents have been warned to stay out of large buildings until their structural integrity can be checked. In the meantime, thousands are temporarily homeless.

An image of Virgin Mary and baby Jesus, in front of the collapsed centuries-old Our Lady of Light church in Loon, Bohol, a day after an earthquake hit central Philippines, on October 16, 2013. (Reuters/Erik De Castro)

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A resident looks out from the window of his family's house that fell into a river after an earthquake, in Buenavista, Bohol, on October 16, 2013. (Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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A view of a portion of a damaged highway in Getafe, Bohol, central Philippines, on October 16, 2013. (Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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Earthquake damage on the historic Basilica Minore of Santo Nino de Cebu, in Cebu City, on October 15, 2013.(Reuters/Stringer) #

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A collapsed building after an earthquake struck Cebu city, on October 15, 2013. (Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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Rescuers use a car jack to retrieve a body pinned by debris in a fish market after an earthquake struck Cebu city, on October 15, 2013. (Reuters/Charlie Saceda) #

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Residents stand outside a damaged building after an earthquake struck Cebu city, on October 15, 2013.(Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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Damaged structures along the coast after an earthquake struck Bohol, central Philippines, on October 15, 2013.(AP Photo/Stringer) #

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A landslide, caused by Tuesday's 7.2-magnitude earthquake, seen from Cortes township, Bohol, on October 16, 2013.(AP Photo/Bullit Marquez) #

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A cross stands at the site of the collapsed St Michael Parish church in Clarin, Bohol a day after the earthquake, on October 16, 2013. (Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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A view of the destroyed St Michael Parish church in Clarin, Bohol, on October 16, 2013. (Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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Children emerge from their half-submerged home which was damaged by Tuesday's 7.2-magnitude earthquake in Cortes township, Bohol, on October 16, 2013. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez) #

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Rescue members recover the body of a vendor killed after an earthquake hit Pasil market in Cebu City, on October 15, 2013.(Reuters/Stringer) #

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Firefighters stand near destroyed vehicles covered with rubble after an earthquake struck Cebu city, on October 15, 2013.(Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) personnel load relief goods onto a PCG vessel at a port in Manila on October 16, 2013. Rescue workers raced to reach isolated communities on a popular Philippine tourist island that was devastated by a huge earthquake, as aftershocks tormented survivors and the death toll climbed to 144. (Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images) #

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Members of the Philippine Coast Guard carry sacks filled with relief goods to load on-board the BRP Corregidor, flagship of the Philippine coast guard, at a port in Manila, on October 16, 2013. (Reuters/Romeo Ranoco) #

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Residents walk past a destroyed church belfry in Tubigon, Bohol, on October 16, 2013. (Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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Villagers use a boat to cross a river after a bridge was damaged in Loon, Bohol, on October 16, 2013. (Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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Rubble from the toppled bell tower of Saint Peter church is scattered at an intersection at Loboc township, Bohol province, on October 16, 2013. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez) #

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Residents walk past the collapsed facade of the San Pedro y San Pablo Parish after an earthquake struck Loboc town, Bohol on October 15, 2013. (Reuters/Stringer) #

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Huge boulders block a highway at Cortes township, Bohol on October 16, 2013, a day after a 7.2-magnitude quake struck.(AP Photo/Bullit Marquez) #

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Patients are treated at a temporary shelter in Cebu city, on October 15, 2013. (Jay Directo/AFP/Getty Images) #

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A boy rides a bicycle past a destroyed building in Loon, Bohol, on October 16, 2013. (Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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A aerial shot of houses that collapsed in the aftermath of an earthquake that struck Bohol province, on October 15, 2013.(Reuters/Stringer) #

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Residents display a message as they camp out in the middle of a rice field to avoid aftershocks following Tuesday's quake at Calape township, Bohol province, on October 16, 2013. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez) #

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Residents rest on a sidewalk as they spend the night on a road due to aftershocks from an earthquake in Cebu city, on October 15, 2013. (Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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Wreckage of the centuries-old Our Lady of Light church in Loon, Bohol, a day after an earthquake hit, on October 16, 2013.(Reuters/Erik De Castro) #

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A quake-damaged statue of Jesus hangs beside the collapsed Our Lady of Light church in Loon, Bohol, on October 16, 2013.(Reuters/Erik De Castro)

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