|
A mudslide (February 17) buried hundreds of houses and an
elementary school the farming village of Guinsaugon in Saint Bernard town on
Leyte island in eastern Philippines. Red Cross officials said 152 were
confirmed dead and over 900 people still missing and presumed dead. Two
other villages also were affected, and about 3,000 evacuees were at a
municipal hall.
An estimated six meters of mud covered what had been lush
green valley farmland. A mild 2.6-magnitude earthquake which struck before
the landslide may also have helped set off the wall of mud that crashed down
on the village.
Many residents evacuated the area due to the threat of
landslides or flooding, but had started returning home.
The search for survivors in Guinsaugon officially ended a
week after the killer mudslide.
Civilian and military authorities decided to abort search
and rescue operations and to have Filipino soldiers and volunteers focus on
retrieving bodies. Foreign volunteers have pulled out, according to Southern
Leyte Gov. Rosette Lerias. Only about 100 Filipino soldiers have remained at
the disaster area for retrieval operations and to secure the site which was
declared off limits to civilians. A 90-man Indonesian medical contingent
will stay for two more weeks to attend to the medical needs of the
survivors. US forces--some 500 American Marines dispatched from the RP-US
Balikatan military exercises--were still helping with the relocation of
around 400 who escaped the landslide and many others who were evacuated from
nearby villages.
About 3,314 evacuees, including 648 from Guinsaugon, are
housed in five evacuation centers in the town proper.
Local authorities are still looking for relocation sites
for the 410 survivors.
As of closure rites” symbolically closing the search and
retrieval operations, some 152 bodies had been recovered while 972 remained
missing and feared dead. Some 98 youngsters were orphaned by the tragedy.
Some 3,314 residents were still at the evacuation centers.
TUCP is conducting a fund drive among its affiliated unions
for survivors in the stricken village. As in the past, the funds raised
would be turned over to the Red Cross or the Department of Social Welfare &
Development (DSWD) to help ensure that the really needy receive help.
TUCP requests contributions from its fellow unions from the
ICFTU and the APRO.
BACK TO TOP
|