West News Wire: As many as 60 residents are thought missing and buried in a massive mudslide loaded with boulders, trees, and debris in a hard-hit southern Philippine province, where flash floods and landslides triggered by torrential rains killed at least 50 people, officials said on Saturday.
In three towns in Maguindanao province from Thursday night to early Friday, at least 42 people were swept away by raging floodwaters and either drowned or were struck by debris-filled mudslides, according to Naguib Sinarimbo, the interior minister for a five-province Muslim autonomous region governed by former separatist guerrillas.
The government’s disaster response organization reported that eight further people perished elsewhere in the nation as a result of Tropical Storm Nalgae’s onslaught, which hit the eastern province of Camarines Sur early on Saturday.
But the worst storm impact so far was a mudslide that buried dozens of houses with as many as 60 people in the tribal village of Kusiong in Maguindanao’s Datu Odin Sinsuat town, Sinarimbo told a news channel by telephone, citing accounts from Kusiong villagers who survived the flash flood and mudslide.
Army Lt. Col. Dennis Almorato, who went to the mudslide-hit community Saturday, said the muddy deluge buried about 60 rural houses in about 5 hectares (12 acres) section of the community. He gave no estimate of how many villagers may have been buried in the mudslide, which he described as “overwhelming.”
At least 13 bodies, mostly of children, were dug up Friday and Saturday by rescuers in Kusiong, Sinarimbo said.
“That community will be our ground zero today,” he said, adding that heavy equipment and more rescue workers had been deployed to intensify the search and rescue work.
“It was hit by torrents of rainwater with mud, rocks and trees that washed out houses,” Sinarimbo said.
The coastal village, which lies at the foot of a mountain, is accessible by road, allowing more rescuers to be deployed Saturday to deal with one of the worst weather-related disasters to hit the country’s south in decades, he said.
Citing reports from mayors, governors and disaster-response officials, Sinarimbo said 27 died mostly by drowning and landslides in Datu Odin Sinsuat town, 10 in Datu Blah Sinsuat town and five in Upi town, all in Maguindanao.
An official death count of 67 in Maguindanao on Friday night was recalled by authorities after discovering some double-counting of casualties.
The unusually heavy rains flooded several towns in Maguindanao and outlying provinces in a mountainous region with marshy plains, which become like a catch basin in a downpour. Floodwaters rapidly rose in many low-lying villages, forcing some residents to climb onto their roofs, where they were rescued by army troops, police and volunteers, Sinarimbo said.
The coast guard issued pictures of its rescuers wading in chest-high, brownish floodwaters to rescue the elderly and children in Maguindanao. Many of the swamped areas had not been flooded for years, including Cotabato city where Sinarimbo said his house was inundated.
The stormy weather in a large swath of the country prompted the coast guard to prohibit sea travel in dangerously rough seas as millions of Filipinos planned to travel over a long weekend for visits to relatives’ tombs and for family reunions on All Saints’ Day in the largely Roman Catholic nation. Several domestic flights have also been canceled, stranding thousands of passengers.
The wide rain bands of Nalgae, the 16th storm to hit the Philippine archipelago this year, enabled it to dump rain in the country’s south even though the storm was blowing farther north, government forecaster Sam Duran said.
With sustained winds of 95 kilometers per hour (59 miles per hour) and gusts as high as 160 kph (99 mph), the storm was pounding Laguna province on Saturday night as it moved northwest, passing just south of the heavily populated capital Manila, which had been predicted to take a direct hit until the storm turned.
According to officials, more than 158,000 people were safely evacuated from a number of provinces and out of the storm’s course.
Each year, the archipelago of the Philippines is hit by about 20 typhoons and hurricanes. Its location on the “Ring of Fire” in the Pacific Ocean, where frequent earthquakes and volcanic eruptions take place, makes the country one of the most disaster-prone in the world.