DAVAO DE ORO - Search-and-recovery personnel kept digging through the mud to recover more bodies from a landslide that struck a southern Philippine mining village last week, as the death toll reached at least 68 with 51 more people still missing, officials said Monday.
Days of heavy rains dislodged saturated
slopes above the gold-mining village of Masara, which lies in Maco town in
southern Davao de Oro province, causing a landslide that engulfed a section of
the community on Feb. 5.
The miraculous recovery of a young girl found alive days later brought some hope but by the weekend, rescuers could not find signs that anyone was still alive under the rubble.
Leah Añora, a member of the Interior
Department’s Management of the Dead and Missing cluster, said dozens of more people
were still missing six days after the disaster.
“As of today, Feb. 12, 2024, we have
already accounted for 68 bodies,” Añora told a press briefing. “Also, we have
51 missing individuals and we have 32 injured as of today.”
Those who perished were workers for Apex
Mining Co. Inc., the firm that owns mining concessions to dig for gold in the
area.
Provincial spokesperson Edward Macapili
on Sunday said that at “ground zero,” the landslide of wet earth that had
cascaded down onto the village buried a portion of it in mud up to 50 meters
(164 feet) deep.
Rescuers have only reached between 20-40
meters (65.6 feet to 131 feet) deep, which is where many of the bodies were
recovered.
“The rescue team is doing its best, even
if it’s very difficult,” he told reporters.
Two
U.S. Marine Corps KC-130J Hercules aircraft stationed in Manila were to be used
to fly in supplies for the affected families, the Philippine military said on
Monday.
The
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has also provided nearly U.S.
$1.25 million in humanitarian aid for those affected in Davao de Oro and Davao
del Norte provinces as well as Davao City.
Company
can ‘voluntarily cease operations’
Meanwhile,
the Philippines’ Department of Environment and Natural Resources has not issued
a suspension order against the company Apex Mining.
Environment
Undersecretary Joselin Fragada said the landslide occurred outside Apex’s area
of operations. The company could suspend its operations, he said.
“They
can choose to do so, it’s their prerogative, right? If they like to, they can
voluntarily cease operations first if the weather conditions are really like
that,” Fragada said.
“We
always remind the mining companies of their responsibilities, and of course,
[that includes] watching the post-effect on communities, as well, since most of
the host communities are employed with them,” he added.
Progressive
groups said Apex Mining should be held liable for the incident, citing
environmental damage as the cause of the landslide.
“Apex
Mining Co. can’t just stay quiet and cover up their big liability and
responsibility to their local workers that became victims, especially for those
who died, because of the landslide and flooding that happened in its mining
site,” said Bayan Muna, vice president for Mindanao Eufemia Cullama, over the
weekend.
In
a stock exchange filing on Monday, Apex Mining Co. said that the incident area,
which it said was 500 meters away from its gate, “is outside the mine
operations area of the company.”
The
area, it said, serves as a vehicle terminal for buses and jeepneys servicing
its employees.
The
company also said that it is now operating with a “limited capacity” as
access to its site was hampered.
“The
company incident command center reported nine employees of the company were
recovered dead from the landslide site, and one was injured and is currently
being treated in a hospital in Davao region,” Apex said on Monday.
“[The]
search-and-rescue operation continues to account/locate/search for the nine
unaccounted for or missing employees,” it added.
The
Philippines is one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world, located
along the Pacific Ring of Fire, where tectonic plates collide, and in the
Pacific typhoon belt.
A
combination of mountainous terrain and high rainfall also makes the archipelago
particularly susceptible to landslides. Man-made disasters have exacerbated
this problem in recent years, experts said.
From
2016 to 2021, the Davao region in the south incurred the highest losses due to
floods and landslides in the Philippines, according to data from the Office of
the Civil Defense. Total cost of damages in the 6-year period was nearly U.S.
$200,000, averaging more than $37,00 a year.
The
area is also one of the region’s illegal logging hotspots, based on Forest
Management Bureau data.
Davao
De Oro, which has been greatly affected by disasters in recent years, lost 8%
of its forest cover from 2010 and 2020, government data showed. (Jeoffrey Maitem and Mark Navales
/ Benar News)
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