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Philippines
Nearly 2,000 feared dead as huge mudslide hits Philippine
village
By John Roberts
20 February 2006
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An entire village in the Philippines was engulfed by a massive
mudslide when the side of a mountain suddenly gave way last Friday.
After three days of rescue efforts, most of the nearly 2,000 inhabitants
of Guinsaugon in the province of Southern Leyte are still missing,
feared dead.
Only 20 or so survivors were pulled from the debris on Friday
as rescuers frantically sought to dig people out with primitive
equipment and their bare hands. Imaging equipment and sniffer
dogs have since been brought into the remote area, but no more
survivors have been found. Some 70 bodies have been retrieved.
Among the missing, buried under up to 10 metres of mud, are
206 pupils and 40 teachers of the villages primary school.
According to several media reports, text messages were sent by
a teacher and a pupil, indicating that they were still alive.
No messages have been received since late Friday, however.
Rescuers are working under extremely difficult conditions.
Major General Bonifacio Ramos, who is in charge of the rescue
operation, told reporters: The mud is like quicksand. It
is very deep and you have to be very careful. We cant move
very fast and its very difficult to bring in advanced heavy
equipment because it may just get sucked into the mud.
The UN and a number of countries have donated financial aid
and supplies. As in the aftermath of the December 2004 tsunami
disaster, Washington has seized the opportunity to put US troops
on the ground in the region. Two US warships have been dispatched
to Southern Leyte and US marines are involved in the rescue effort
at the site of the disaster.
Philippines President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo expressed sorrow
over the catastrophe and declared that every effort would be made
to locate any survivors. Rescuers are still being hampered by
a lack of modern equipment and emergency lighting, however. Arroyo
warned of further landslides amid forecasts of further heavy rain
and promised to assist endangered areas adopt safety precautions.
Arroyos comments are completely cynical. The causes of
the latest tragedy are similar to those that have produced other
mudslide disasters in recent years. On each occasion, Arroyo and
other officials made a series of promises, only to drop them once
public outrage subsided. In November 1991, flash floods and landslides
killed about 5,000 people in Ormoc, the second largest town on
Leyte.
Last Fridays mudslide was caused by the combination of
a steep, unstable hillside and very heavy rain. In the previous
week, more than half a metre of rain fell in the areanearly
four times the weekly average of 127 millimetres. Some villagers
had been evacuated from the area but returned when the rain subsided.
A mild earthquake measuring 2.6 on the Richter scale may have
contributed to the disaster.
The entire 700-metre Kan-abag Mountain gave way from its peak,
producing a mudslide three kilometres wide by the time it reached
the village. Eyewitnesses reported a sound like an underground
explosion. I looked up to the mountain and I saw the ground
and boulders rushing down, survivor Alicia Miravalles told
the press. I thought I was dead. If the landslide did not
stop, I would really be dead, now.
Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Angelo Reyes denied
that illegal logging contributed to the landslide, saying the
area around Guinsaugon is not a logged area. However,
local Congressman Roger Mercado said that, while large-scale logging
ceased 10 years ago, the present situation was a legacy of that
logging. Army captain Edmund Abella, head of one of the rescue
teams, said local people blamed small, widespread chainsaw
logging in the area.
Whether or not illegal logging was a contributing factor, the
area is notoriously unstable geologically. In December 2003, mudslides
in Southern Leyte and northeastern Mindanao claimed around 300
lives. The worst affected were a number of villages on the small
island of Panaon.
Then as now, President Arroyo expressed sympathy for the victims
and promised to take action. The governments Mines and Geosciences
Bureau (GMB) initiated a geohazard mapping project to identify
vulnerable zones. The study found that the rock structure of the
mountains surrounding many of the towns was badly broken
and fragmented because of numerous faults and major
fractures, making it particularly susceptible to landslides
after heavy rain.
The GMB report stated: Clearly, disaster preparedness
measures must be sharpened and an early warning system established
in order to prevent other tragedies similar to Panaon Island and
Surigao from happening again. Along with the Department
of Environment and Natural Resources, the GMB developed an action
plan to establish an early warning system and to undertake
preventative measures.
According to a Philippine Star report, the village of
Guinsaugon was one of the areas deemed unfit for dwelling
and recommended for evacuation. An official from the Department
of Environment and Natural resources told the newspaper: There
should be no community existing there.
In December 2004, more than 1,000 people died when flash flooding
and landslides hit the eastern Quezon province in the northern
Philippines after two large tropical storms. Three coastal townsReal,
Infanta and General Nakarwere the worst affected. Illegal
logging was again cited as a major contributing factor to the
tragedy.
Arroyo reacted by banning logging in the areas and threatening
draconian punishments for illegal loggers. We are determined
to make those responsible for widespread death and destruction
pay the price for their misdeeds, she declared. We
shall prosecute them the way we do terrorists, kidnappers, drug
traffickers and other heinous criminals.
Little changed, however. The Arroyo administration has no solution
to the terrible poverty that afflicts many rural areas in the
Philippines and that drives many to eke out a living through illegal
logging and mining operations. The larger operators and businessmen
have been left largely untouched. Preventative measures such as
early warning systems have not been put in place and emergency
services remain adequate.
Following the latest tragedy, 11 villages near Guinsaugon have
been evacuated. Pointing to illegal logging and mining, Senator
Jamby Madrigal warned: [U]nless the government demonstrates
the political will to address the serious threats to the environment,
our country will become a no mans land.
But once the publicity has died away, all of the promises and
expressions of concern by politicians at the local, national and
international levels will be shelved and the poverty-stricken
villages of Southern Leyte and other vulnerable areas of the Philippines
will be left to fend for themselves until the next disaster.
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