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Special report: Major Filipino mudslide
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Some 300 houses, including a school packed with elementary students, were buried under tons of mud and rock that cascaded from a nearby mountain. (Photo: Xinhua/REUTERS) |
MANILA, Feb. 17 (Xinhuanet) -- At least 200 people were feared killed and 1,500 others missing, with 10 hectares of land were smothered in a landslide that hit Barangay (village) Guinsaugon in St. Bernard town, Southern Leyte province, Central Philippines on Friday morning, according to Red Cross officials.
Some 300 houses, including a school packed with
elementary students, were buried under tons of mud and rock that cascaded from a
nearby mountain.
Local officials said that the death toll could rise
because the entire village with a population of 2,000 had been affected by the
landslide.
Initial reports said the landslide happened around
11:15 a.m. local time, killing four people in what was described as a densely
populated village. Many of the casualties were feared to be children as classes
were going on in an area school when the disaster occurred.
Rescuers from the Philippine Army and Philippine Air
Force rushed to St. Bernard town after landslide hit Barangay Guinsaugon past 10
a.m. on Friday.
Like much of Eastern Visayas region in south-central
Philippines, Southern Leyte has been experiencing continuous rainfall for the
past two weeks, which experts attributed to the La Nina weather phenomenon.
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Map of Philippine, the
red arrow indicates the Leyte island. (file
photo) |
Last Sunday, a landslide hit Sogod municipality, also
in Southern Leyte, where eight people died when traveling on two motorcycles on
a road.
Meanwhile, more than a dozen people were also killed
in northern Mindanao, which neighbors Eastern Visayas, by flooding caused by
heavy rains over the past two weeks.
Emergency teams from the National Disaster
Coordinating Council, Philippine Army, Philippine National Police and the
Southern Leyte provincial government have been deployed in the area, said local
officials.
The Philippine government has asked local authorities
and farmers to be fully prepared for the La Nina weather phenomenon, which is
characterized by heavy rains and sometimes tropical storms. Authorities said the
bad weather could continue until May. Enditem
Backgrounder:
The Leyte island measures about 180 km
north-south and about 65 km at its widest point.
In the north it nearly joins Samar, separated by the San
Juanico Strait , which becomes as narrow as 2 km in some places. The island
province of Biliran is also to the north of Leyte and is joined to Leyte island
by a bridge across the narrow Biliran Strait.
To the south Leyte is separated from Mindanao by the
Surigao Strait. To the east, Leyte is somewhat "set back" from the Philippine
Sea of the Pacific Ocean, Samar to the northeast and Dinagat to the
southeast forming the Leyte Gulf. To the west are Cebu and Bohol.
Leyte is mostly heavily forested and mountainous, but the
Leyte Valley in the northeast has much agriculture. |