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MANILA, Feb. 18 (Xinhuanet) -- Philippine President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo Saturday ordered various government agencies and the
military to quicken the rescue operation and relief efforts in the wake of a
devastating landslide which officials said buried at least 1,500 people in a
village in Southern Leyte, central Philippines on Friday.
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| At an emergency meeting on the landslide Arroyo chaired at the Camp Aguinaldo military headquarters in Metro Manila, she thanked the international community for their solidarity and support. [Xinhua/AFP] | At an emergency meeting on the landslide she chaired
at the Camp Aguinaldo military headquarters in Metro Manila, Arroyo also thanked
the international community for their solidarity and support.
At the meeting which was covered direct by television
and other media, Arroyo was briefed by officials of the government agencies
working under the National Disaster Coordination Council (NDCC), who said that
36 bodies have been found in the quagmire of landslide burial ground so far.
The NDCC also pegged the number of rescued survivors
at 80 while 1,500 are still missing.
Arroyo thanked the international community including
the International Red Cross, United Nation Children's Fund and the U.S.
government pledged their help for the victims of the tragedy.
Disaster officials said they have created two teams
to concentrate on the search and rescue operations in the town of St. Bernard,
where the disaster took place.
They also said hundreds of villagers from 11 villages
in the region have been evacuated and seven centers have been set up to shelter
the evacuees, in fear that more landslide could strike. Some 3,000 villagers in
that area have lost homes due to other smaller scale landslides.
U.S. Charge d'Affaires Paul Jones, who also attended
the meeting, said the United States government has pledged 100,000 U.S. dollars
of aid for the victims and could send troops to the disaster site to join
humanitarian operations. Enditem |