17 confirmed dead in Natonin
BAGUIO CITY -- A
total of 25 persons have been confirmed dead, three of them still unidentified,
while 15 others are still missing in the aftermath of Typhoon Rosita in the
Cordillera region.
The
Cordillera Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council reported on Tuesday most
of the fatalities were recorded in Natonin town in Mountain Province, where a
building of the Department of Public Works and Highways being constructed
crumbled in a huge landslide from a mountain across the road in the afternoon
of Oct. 30.
Ruben
Carandang, regional director of the CDRRMC and the Office of Civil Defense
Cordillera, said as of 7 a.m. on Nov. 6, a total of 17 persons were confirmed
dead in Natonin, three of them unidentified.
Seven deaths
were recorded in four towns of Ifugao, while one was recorded in Lubuagan town
in Kalinga province.
Confirmed
dead from the Natonin landslide were identified as Joel Arevalo, Gregorio Castro,
Juanita Longan, Virginia Malucay, Coyugan Catet, John Tenmacheg,
Jerry Epan, Raymundo Ngilin, Benito Longan, JunJun Laron, Elbert
"Berto" Cano, Reynato "Pablo" Ayom, Gary Hecyawan, and
Rogelio Alubong.
Meanwhile, 14
of the reported 15 missing persons were at the Natonin landslide area. One was
from Lacub town in Abra province.
Those
recovered in Ifugao province were identified as Baltazar Pinnay, Rexibel
Pinnay, Rhezel Pinnay, Rydnell Pinnay, Kimber Padching, Eugene Nah-og Allangi,
and Brawner Maradang.
Recorded dead
in Kalinga due to the typhoon was Eurich Jane Galo in Luguagan town.
Search shifts
to rivers
The search
and rescue operatives have expanded their search to the rivers below the
landslide site in Sitio Ha’rang, Barangay Banawel in Natonin, to find the 14
missing persons, who were believed to have supposedly sought shelter from the
typhoon at the DPWH building that would be swept away in rainwater and mud.
SAR operations are now a few kilometers away
from the landslide site, including the river at Sitio Tuboy and in Barangay
Bananao in neighboring Paracelis town, where the water from the landslide site,
now called "ground zero," drains.
The SAR teams
are composed of personnel from various government and non-government rescue
teams and volunteers from non-government organizations and the communities.
DSWD
assistance
Janet Armas,
regional director of the Dept. of Social Welfare and Development in Cordillera,
said on Tuesday the agency is now conducting stress debriefing for survivors
and relatives of the casualties.
According to
the CDRRMC report as of Nov. 6, there were 120 affected families and 427
displaced persons in Cordillera, who are now staying either in the nine
evacuation centers in Benguet and Mountain Province or with their relatives.
The DSWD-CAR
said relief items are being delivered by land, air, and by boat, as there are
still isolated areas in the region.
Hygiene kits,
family kits, sleeping kits, and kitchen kits are being brought to the affected
families.
Armas said
the DSWD has completed the delivery of supplies in the flooded villages of Lubo
and Dacalan in Tanudan town in Kalinga, as well as in the flooded villages in
Paracelis town in Mountain Province.
Some rice was
also air-lifted to the isolated areas in Natonin, to augment whatever stock the
people had saved from their previous harvests.
Armas said
Mountain Province Gov. Bonifacio Lacwasan had assured the provision of food for
the over 500 rescuers.
The DSWD-CAR
posted on facebook that the agency had so far 31,060 family food packs and
other items, worth a sum of P46.12 million, being delivered to the affected
families.
A standby
fund of P4.4 million remains on hand for disaster response.
As of press
time, 11 more persons, including five members of the Civilian Armed Forces
Geographic Unit (CAFGU), remained missing in the Natonin landslide.
Capt.
Jefferson Somera, 5th Army Division spokesman, said examination conducted on
three bodies brought to Aguinaldo, Ifugao
showed they were not the remains of militiamen Leobel Orchilion, Linang
Pallichang and Jonathan Ngilin.
The bodies
were returned to the funeral parlor by their supposed relatives.
Somera said
five CAFGU men of the 77th Infantry Battalion (IB) went on leave to moonlight
as construction workers.
Lt. Col.
Rembert Baylosis, 77th IB commander, had earlier said that the family members
of the CAFGU men buried in the landslide would receive P200,000 in cash
assistance.
Five more
bodies were recovered from the landslide site on Nov. 4. Only two of the five
found that day have been identified, Natonin Mayor Mateo Chiyawan said.
The
Provincial Risk Reduction and Management Office identified the remains of Joel
Arevalo, Gregorio Castro, Juanita Longan, Virginia Catet, Coyugan Catet, John
Tenmacheg, Jerry Epan, Reymundo Ngilin, Benito Longan, Junjun Laron, Elberto
Betco and Reynato Ayom.
Another body
was recovered from ground zero in Barangay Banawel Monday night, bringing the
total number of fatalities to 18.
Earlier
retrieved dead from the slide were Benito Longan, 78; Junjun Laron RAF employee
and native of Agoo, La Union; Joel Arevalo, 39 from Bicol region; Gregorio
Castro from Baguio City and three other unidentified individuals.
Mike
Saleo-an, of barangay Banawel and one of those who volunteered to join the
retrieval operations was reportedly carried away by strong current while
crossing a creek on his way home to Sitio Pomangwao.
His body was
fished downstream by residents who responded to the alarm.
Rescued were
Juventino Lammawen, Jupiter Pacyod, Fritzgerald Lumpanga and Junjun Gallingoy.
All of them suffered minor injuries.
As this
developed, Chiwayan questioned a risk assessment report of the Mines and
Geosciences Bureau released on Oct. 25, which showed that “no area in Natonin
is declared safe.”
“Saan kami
magbi-build ng bahay namin. Baguio City was also declared a high-risk area
in terms of landslides... but MGB personnel have big houses there,” he said.
The rescue
and retrieval operation for the 17 still missing in a landslide here continues,
with a large number of operatives concentrating their effort on the river.
Former
Natonin Mayor Marie Rafael who is currently the Assistant Secretary for
Legislative Affairs of the Presidential Communications Operations Office had
expressed sadness for the sad fate of her town.
Rafael walked
over 10 kilometers in 4 hours, traversing the 31 remaining landsides that were
blocking the roads from Paracelis town going to ground zero on November 1 to
see for herself the condition on the ground and the situation of her townmates.
From Baguio,
Paracelis is about 10 hours away by land and several more hours to reach
Natonin.
Rafael
expressed confidence that the DPWH will continue to operate 24- hours a day
until the road is opened up to Poblacion.
DPWH
Cordillera regional director Tiburcio Canlas had earlier relayed his personal
assessment of the roads to Natonin saying that it might take a month to fully
clear the road to Natonin of the debris.
The
Cordillera has yet to recover from the devastation of typhoon “Ompong” that
left over 100 people dead in Itogon and in other provinces when it was again
battered by typhoon “Rosita” where an initial 22 have been recorded dead.
Seven deaths
were recorded in Ifugao; 1 in Lubuagan, Kalinga; 2 in Barlig town and the 12
recovered bodies in Natonin, Mt. Province.
This number
is expected to increase as the operation to find the missing bodies in Natonin
continues.
A total of
7,507 families or 30,666 persons in 224 barangays were affected in the six
provinces of the Cordillera.
As of early
last week, there were still 135 families
or 466 individuals staying in 15 evacuation centers in Cagayan Valley, Eastern
Visayas and CAR due to Rosita.
Nine are in
CAR, where 111 families or 3,114 persons are currently taking refuge.
DSWD has so
far provided P,693,964.25 worth of assistance to the affected families. – With
a report from PNA
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