By Pamela
Mariz Geminiano
ITOGON, Benguet
-- Secretary Francis Tolentino, Presidential Adviser on Political Affairs,
has directed operatives to focus on just body retrieval operations, as there
seems to be "no sign of life" left at the landslide area in this
mining town.
In a press conference
here on Tuesday afternoon, Tolentino said rescue operations in the area would
have to be stopped, shifting focus on the search and retrieval of dead bodies
instead.
"We are declaring
that this is purely retrieval operations, as no sign of life is being
detected," he said.
It has been 10 days
since the fatal landslide occurred in Barangay Ucab at the height of Typhoon
Ompong (Mangkhut) on Sept. 15, burying scores of residents, mostly small-scale
miners and contractual mining laborers.
As of 8:30 a.m. on
Wednesday, the Cordillera Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council (CDRRMC)
has confirmed 85 deaths and 23 still missing in Itogon town.
Majority of those still
not found, or 17, were in Barangay Ucab, particularly in the landslide area now
called here "ground zero."
Tolentino has also
instructed the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) to start the
psycho-social processing for the victims' relatives.
"This is a
devastating news. That is why the DSWD will be conducting community counseling
to ease the pain of the victims," he lamented.
DSWD regional director
Janet Armas said her department had actually begun the community counseling for
the victims, who earlier evacuated from their homes as "Ompong"
ravaged the area.
Armas said a group of
psychologists would be conducting stress debriefing and trauma counseling among
the victims' relatives.
“There will be an
augmentation of nurses coming from the DOH (Department of Health) to help
during the conduct of the debriefing and counseling of the families of the
victims, especially the relatives of those still missing under tons of mud,”
she added.
In an earlier press
conference near "ground zero,"
Tolentino said the DOH and the Office of Civil Defense had declared a
"slim chance of finding survivors."
On Saturday, the
Secretary and the heads of the departments in the region agreed to wait two
more days before they lift the rescue operation and shift to purely retrieval.
Brig. Gen.
Leopoldo Imbang of the Philippine Army in Northern Luzon, who headed the
search, rescue, and retrieval (SSR) operations, said operatives were then
moving towards the old mine portal of the Benguet Corporation, where the people
could have sought refuge. On Tuesday, the portal was reached and one body was
found near it.
Debriefing, DNA sample taking
The CDRRMC has advised
the relatives waiting for news on their missing family members to proceed to
the DSWD regional office in Baguio for their psycho-social processing.
Information obtained
from reliable sources said the debriefing will include explaining to the
families the operational shift from rescue to retrieval and to help them cope
with the loss.
The media had been
barred from the area to prevent inconvenience to the grieving relatives, who
would have to accept that their family members are already dead.
The relatives were also
advised to go to the DSWD, so their DNA samples would be taken for matching
with the unidentified bodies earlier recovered from the site and those who are
still to be recovered.
The DNA matching, while
it will take long, will assure that the bodies released to the relatives are
their own, the National Bureau of Investigation forensic team earlier
said.
Ifugao folks mourn townmates
Ifugao province recorded
zero casualty in the onslaught of Typhoon "Ompong" but the Ifugaos
are mourning the death of scores of their townmates in the landslide.
“We mourn this
unfortunate incident. There was no recorded death in our province in Ifugao,
but those who died and others who are missing in Itogon are from Ifugao,”
Ifugao Gov. Pedro Mayam-o said in a telephone interview last week.
He said about 80 to 90
percent of those who died in the Ucab mines, as well as those still missing,
are from his province.
Mayam-o arrived in
Benguet’s capital town La Trinidad on Sept. 17, in time for President Rodrigo
Duterte’s visit to the typhoon-devastated province to meet with the families of
the victims in Baguio and Benguet and to hear about the incident.
But Mayam-o said his
primary purpose in going to Benguet was to check on the welfare of his
townmates--the families of most of the victims of the landslide.
He came with provincial
social work office chief Joyce Niwane to assist the victims' families.
Together with the
families of the victims, Mayam-o waited sitting on the sides hoping the rescue
operation at "ground zero" will find survivors, or at least the
remains of his townmates, who perished in the accident.
Ifugao Rep. Teddy Brawner
Baguilat has also appealed to both the government and the private sector for
more assistance to the families of miners who perished in Itogon. many of whom
are from Ifugao and were sole breadwinners in their family.
Baguilat started the
campaign immediately after it was known that scores of miners were killed in
the landslides caused by the heavy rains from typhoon Ompong, which recently
barreled across Luzon.
The call for donations
in cash or in kind such as rice and hygiene kits was heeded by a number of
individuals and institutions who sent help through Baguilat's office.
So far, close to
P500,000 has been collected through fund-raising activities in Manila, which
drew the support of fellow representatives in the Lower House and civil society
organizations.
Pledges also continue to
come in to help the families of the fallen Ifugao miners.
As for the longer-term
solution, Baguilat is calling for the review of existing mining laws to ensure
that small-scale miners will be able to work in a safe environment.
At the same time, there
will have to be other livelihood options available to those who went into
mining to provide food on the table for their families.
“With assistance from
the national government, perhaps we will be able to encourage our people to
give up mining altogether and return to the province and engage in the
traditional livelihood of agriculture or other viable alternatives. We are
famous for our rice and also for our coffee. The potential for growth remains
and we just need further assistance to unleash that full potential,” Baguilat
said.
As Congressman of
Ifugao, Baguilat has supported livelihood generation in his province by
providing enterprise grants to community organisations, helping organic farming
communities in their marketing and production needs and allocating funds for
improvement of farm to market roads. -- With reports from Pamela Mariz
Geminiano, PNA
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