This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VI, No. 3, February 19-25, 2006
Rainfall, Quake Triggered
Leyte Landslide
The landslide took place on February 17, at
around 10am to 11am. After more than two weeks of heavy rainfall, which hit a
record of 500mm of rain and topped-off by a 2.6 intensity earthquake (that,
according to some sources, happened just 5 minutes before the incident), rocks
and mud cascaded from the nearby mountain, burying the village in just a matter
of minutes.
By Maureen Japzon Tacloban City
– The start of the La Nina phenomenon was marked dramatically with the onset of
heavy rainfall triggering the horrifying landslide, which buried almost the
entire community in Guinsaugon, a village of St. Bernard Southern Leyte, in the
Visayas Islands in Central Philippines. The avalanche of mud and rocks affected
375 households (with 1,875 people). Around 1,500 residents are reportedly
missing or possibly covered in meters deep of mud and an estimated 200 persons
dead. “I was in my farm that morning when I heard a
sound like a volcanic eruption, then rocks and mud flowed from the adjacent
mountain to my position. In just two (2) minutes the whole village of
Guinsaugon had vanished”, said a survivor. His wife was buried alive in the landslide
but fortunately his three children were with him when disaster struck.
Also buried was the entire elementary school
(grades 1-6) of the said community, which had 224 pupils, six teachers, and one
head teacher. They were holding classes when the incident occurred.
The landslide took place on February 17, at
around 10am to 11am. After more than two weeks of heavy rainfall, which hit a
record of 500mm of rain and topped-off by a 2.6 intensity earthquake that,
according to sources, happened just 5 minutes before rocks and mud cascaded from
the nearby mountain burying the village in just a matter of minutes.
UCCP Story
In a phone interview with Reverend Pastor Jun
Gulles of the UCCP, St. Bernard Church, he says that 15 members of his church
were among the casualties, two teachers in Guinsaugon and 13 pupils from the
nearby village Magatas. A certain Pastor Neil Doyhakaw and his two children
were also buried during the landslide.
The UCCP church is open as sanctuary for the
evacuees. As of press time, 70 UCCP members were in the care of the local
church.
Seven evacuation centers were established in
nearby villages by the local government unit through the Department of Social
Welfare and Development (DSWD) to accommodate the evacuees from the neighboring
village of Guinsaugon.
“The data yesterday aired in media were
bloated. Based on our own monitoring and from data provided by the DSWD here,
we accounted 1,500 evacuees in different evacuation centers and 54 recovered
dead bodies. The DSWD is organizing the distribution of relief goods that had
poured in, but they are in need of more volunteers. They are trying hard to
handle things efficiently,” said Rev. Gulles.
He further stated that all institutions like the
UCCP church that will volunteer in rescue & relief missions must coordinate with
the DSWD to avoid duplication and any misunderstanding.
Local Government Unit Information
Erna Sy Gorne, the Provincial Information Center
Manager said there were 57 survivors rescued and immediately brought to Anahawan
District Hospital.
Maria Lim, Mayor of St. Bernard told the media
that it is possible that some municipal officials were among the casualties
since they were at the said village for the celebration of Women’s Health Day
including the Guinsaugon Chieftain Absalon Libaton and some of his council
members. The identified municipal officials were Public Health Nurse Athena
Letigio, Municipal Social Worker Felicidad Ilagan, and Midwife Susan Sabandal.
.
Emergency teams from the National Disaster
Coordinating Council, Philippine Army, Philippine National Police, and
Philippine National Red Cross (PNRC) immediately responded to the call of
Rosette Lerias, Governor of Southern Leyte. U.S. Marines were also redeployed
here from the Balikatan Exercise for the rescue and recovery mission.
PNRC officials estimated the death toll at 200,
with 1,500 residents still missing.
Causes of the landslide
Experts said the massive rainfall, the
earthquake and the location of the village were the factors that caused the
calamity to take place.
Renato Solidum, director of Philippine Institute
of Volcanology and Seismology, stated in an ANC interview that it needs an
intensity seven earthquake to trigger a landslide but it only needs 100mm of
rainfall to have a calamity.
A statement released by the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) stated that, “The affected area, which
falls within alienable and disposable land (A&D), is immediately adjacent to the
Philippine fault zone. Geologically, it is underlain by volcanic rocks
characterized by intense fracturing and weathering which makes it unstable and
susceptible to mass movement.”
It further states that “DENR Secretary Angelo T.
Reyes has dispatched a team of geologists… who will coordinate with the LGUs in
assessing other unsafe areas that could present possible recurrence of another
landslide and in identifying areas for possible relocation sites”.
Although experts discounted illegal logging as
the primary cause of the disaster, a study titled The Science of Slides by
Jen Shaffer of Oregon State, believes that presence of trees can prevent the
huge effect of debris flow or landslide. Based from this study, it
states “trees intercept rain, lessening the impact that individual raindrops
have on soil… Roots hold soil down. Trees have larger and deeper root systems
than grasses or shrubs, and are therefore more effective in retaining soil. When
trees are cut though, their roots die and quickly begin to decay. As the roots
rot, they lose their ability to hold soil”.
“The tragedy in Ormoc fifteen years ago and the
recent Quezon Province disaster should have provided us with valuable lessons.
Likewise, we should have listened to the cries of victims who had died in
similar disasters to push us to effect changes and undertake measures that will
prevent the loss of so many lives. But why are these things still happening?
Who is to be blamed?” grieved UCCP Pastor Minerva Cabas and Promotion of Church
Peoples Response Chairman in Eastern Visayas.
The said organization is planning to initiate an
interfaith mission to help victims of the said calamity. Bulatlat
© 2006 Bulatlat
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