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BEIJING, Feb. 20 -- Rescuers are picking through a
sea of mud in search of survivors after a massive landslide buried 1,800
Philippine villagers, but officials conceded hope was all but lost.
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| Residents of nearby villages watch rescue
operations near the buried remote farming village of Guinsaugon Feb. 19.
(Xinhua/Reuters) | More
than 48 hours after a mountainside collapsed, sending a wall of mud and boulders
crashing into the village of Guinsaugon, rescuers roped together for safety
hunted in vain for survivors but found only a few bodies in the muck.
In Manila, Philippine President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo met with the National Disaster Coordinating Council. She expressed her
gratitude for all the help offered by other countries around the world.
The Chairman of the Council, Avelino Cruz, said the
situation in the affected area was "difficult."
"The report from the ground is we cannot use heavy
equipment because the ground is still moving and soft. So we have to dig
manually with shovels and picks."
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| Philippine soldiers cross the river by
bulldozer to the landslide site at Guinsaugon Village Feb. 19.
(Xinhua) |
Weary search teams recovered more than a dozen bodies
on Sunday. The confirmed death toll stood at 72, but was certain to jump.
In the town of St Bernard, officials held a mass
burial for 50 unidentified bodies that were decomposing quickly in the tropical
conditions.
President Arroyo has warned that the Philippines
could face more landslides amid forecasts of further heavy rain and promised to
help threatened areas adopt safety precautions.
Eleven villages near Guinsaugon have been
evacuated.
(Source: CRIENGLISH.com)
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