Aftershocks rattle survivors in quake-hit Philippines

AFP

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Thousands of residents of a quake-hit city in the southern Philippines sought refuge on the streets as aftershocks hit the ­region yesterday, two days after a quake killed eight people.

The6.5-magnitude quake struck Surigaoand nearby areas of Mindanao island late on Friday, injuring 202, with more than 1,000 homes destroyed or damaged, according to officials.

People who had fled their damaged homes wrapped themselves in blankets and sacks for a second night as they slept side-by-side on the pavement.

The state seismology office recorded 130 weaker quakes in Surigao, a city of 152,000 people, and in the predominantly agricultural region around it since the quake struck, though there were no additional reports of casualties.

Filipino villagers collect potable water in the earthquake-hit city of Surigao, Surigao del Norte province. Photo: EPA

“The people are terrified about the aftershocks,” Romina Marasigan, spokeswoman for the government’s National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council told reporters.

“This was the first time Surigao had suffered a quake this strong. The previous one occurred in the 1800s,” President Rodrigo ­Duterte’s spokesman Martin Andanar, a native of the region, said on government radio.

Duterte flew to the region ­yesterday to inspect the response effort, which officials said has shifted to relief and rehabilitation after the last of the dead and injured were pulled from the rubble.

He was accompanied by a military transport plane loaded with generator sets, solar lamps, high-energy biscuits, mosquito nets and blankets for the displaced residents, Marasigan said.

A woman carrying her belongings as she arrives to take shelter from strong aftershocks of an earthquake. Photo: EPA

Early yesterday, long lines of people carrying pails and jugs queued for water rations supplied by fire trucks after the quake cut off the tap water supply.

“We’re still being hit by aftershocks and as of now we do not have tap water supply. The people are suffering,” provincial information officer Mary Escalante told ABS-CBN television.

“Buildings that suffered ­structural damage have been closed,” she said, adding some schools and gyms that were meant to serve as evacuation ­centres were among those damaged by the quake.

The quake also damaged bridges and roads and knocked out the electricity supply, although it was restored to most of Surigao on Saturday.

An average of five earthquakes – most undetectable – hit daily across the Philippines, which lies on the Ring of Fire, a Pacific Ocean region where many earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur.

(AFP)