Google – AFP, 15 October 2013
![]() |
Cars
damaged by falling debris in downtown Cebu City, Philippines, after a
major 7.1
magnitude earthquake struck the region on October 15, 2013 (AFP)
|
Cebu — A
powerful earthquake killed at least 93 people in the Philippines Tuesday as it
generated landslides that buried homes, triggered terrified stampedes and
destroyed historic churches.
Fifteen of
the confirmed fatalities were in Cebu, the country's second most important city
and a gateway to some of its most beautiful beaches, the national disaster
agency reported.
The
7.1-magnitude quake killed another 77 people in the neighbouring island of
Bohol, famed for its rolling "Chocolate Hills", while one other
person died on nearby Siquijor, which attracts tourists with its pristine white
sands.
"I was
thrown to the ground by the strength of the quake. Broken glass rained on
me," Elmo Alinsunorin, who was on duty as a guard for a government tax
office in Cebu, told AFP.
"I
thought I was going to die."
Authorities
said the death toll could still climb, with officials struggling to assess the
extent of the damage in the worst-hit areas of Bohol where roads remained
impassable and power was cut at nightfall.
Bohol police chief Senior Superintendent Dennis Agustin said one of the worst affected areas was the coastal town of Loon, where at least 18 people were killed by landslides that buried houses along large stretches of highway.
![]() |
Graphic
locating Bohol island in the Philippines where a 7.1-magnitude quake
struck on
Tuesday morning (AFP)
|
Bohol police chief Senior Superintendent Dennis Agustin said one of the worst affected areas was the coastal town of Loon, where at least 18 people were killed by landslides that buried houses along large stretches of highway.
Loon is
about 20 kilometres (12 miles) from where the epicentre of the quake struck at
just after 8:00am (0000 GMT). It faces a narrow strait of water, with Cebu
about 25 kilometres away on the other side.
Cebu, with
a population of 2.5 million people, is the political, economic, educational and
cultural centre of the central Philippines.
![]() |
The Church
of San Pedro in the town of
Loboc on Bohol island, Philippines lies
in ruins
after a major 7.1 magnitude
earthquake struck the region on October
15, 2013
(AFP, Robert Michael Poole)
|
A
university, a school, shopping malls, public markets and many small buildings
in Cebu sustained damage in the quake.
Mass panic
sparks stampede
Three of
the people who died in Cebu were crushed to death in a stampede at a sports
complex, according to the provincial disaster council chief, Neil Sanchez.
"There
was panic when the quake happened and there was a rush toward the exit,"
Sanchez told AFP.
He said two
other people were killed when part of a school collapsed on a car they had
parked in, while four others died at a fish market that crumbled.
Ten
churches, some of which have crucial links to the earliest moments of Spanish
colonial and Catholic conquest in the 1500s, were also badly damaged on Cebu
and Bohol.
![]() |
People
gather on the street next to damaged
buildings in Cebu City, central
Philippines
after a major 7.1 magnitude earthquake
struck the region on October
15, 2013 (AFP)
|
Other
limestone churches that were built in the 1700s and 1800s on Bohol had crumbled
completely, prompting grieving for the loss of some of the Philippines' most
important cultural treasures.
"It is
like part of the body of our country has been destroyed," Michael
Charleston "Xiao" Chua, a history lecturer at De La Salle University
in Manila, told AFP.
Aside from
its beaches, Bohol is famous for its more than 1,000 small limestone
"Chocolate Hills" that turn brown during the dry season.
One of the
main tourist venues there, the Chocolate Hills Complex, was severely damaged,
according to Delapan Ingleterra, head of a local tourist police unit.
"There
are huge cracks in the hotel and there was a collapse of the view deck on the
second floor," Ingleterra told AFP, adding that no-one was injured at the
complex.
![]() |
People walk
past the damaged Church of
San Pedro in Loboc, on Philipinnes Bohol
island,
after a major 7.1 magnitude
earthquake struck the region on October
15, 2013 (AFP, Robert Michael Poole)
|
Tuesday's
quake was followed by hundreds of aftershocks, at least four aftershocks of
which measured more than 5.0 in magnitude.
The
Philippines lies on the so-called Ring of Fire, a vast Pacific Ocean region
where many of Earth's earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur.
More than
100 people were left dead or missing in February last year after an earthquake
struck on Negros island, about 100 kilometres from the epicentre of Tuesday's
quake.
The
deadliest recorded natural disaster in the Philippines occurred in 1976, when a
tsunami triggered by a magnitude 7.9 earthquake devastated the Moro Gulf on the
southern island of Mindanao.
Between
5,000 and 8,000 people were killed, according to official estimates.





No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.