DU30 visits as 4 rescued, 22 missing in Mt. Province catastrophe
By Angel Baybay
NATONIN, Mountain Province -- Eight were
confirmed dead, 22 still missing, four rescued while 10 others escaped from the
landslide at Barangay Banawel here that buried a Dept. of Public Works and
Highways Tuesday as Typhoon “Rosita” unleashed its wrath which residents said
was the worst natural calamity to happen in the town in recent years.
Mayor Mateo Chiyawan
and the Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council confirmed these
figures amid conflicting figures from other sources and media outfits covering
the incident.
Most of the casualties
were employees of RAF Construction and Moment Diagram Construction contracted
by the DPWH to extend and make the roof of the DPWH building of the second
district engineering office.
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 a 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.
Together with some
private houses, the DPWH building was crushed and buried t Tuesday afternoon by
rolling boulders and mud from a massive landslide up the mountain slope.
As of press time,
rescuers had to use bare hands and tools since heavy equipment volunteered by
government offices from and outside the province were busy clearing many
landslides going to the accident area.
Volunteer rescuers walked
through many kilometers but this did not dampen the their will to help.
Aside from the medical and rescue teams
from different local government units of
the province including contingents from the police, Army, and Fire Department,
teams from nearby provinces reached ground zero.
After an aerial visit last Thursday,
President Rodrigo Duterte ordered all national line agencies to facilitate the
recovery of Natonin.
The president urged
the DPWH to hasten opening of road networks going to and from Natonin.
Upon the request of Gov, Bonifacio
Lacwasan, Jr. who accompanied the president last Thursday, the President also
ordered the DSWD to airlift basic goods to the affected people of Natonin.
Lacwasan, as of press
time, was following up his request for airlifting of the cadavers to Alfonso
Lista in Ifugao where they will be transported by vehicles to their grieving
families.
Rescue and
retrieval operations started Wednesday morning and survivors and dead bodies
were found by midday, Natonin Councilor Rafael Bulawe said.
Bulawe said it was past
1:30 p.m., when the rescuers found four survivors from rubble of the building
at Sitio Har’rang in Barangay Banawel.
Bulawe said two persons
were the first to be rescued.
Juventino
Gallad Lammawen and Fritz Lumpanga were rescued near the landslide area.
According to Lammawen,
while he was closing the main gate of the DPWH compound at around 4 p.m. on
Tuesday he noticed the soil on the mountain starting to move which prompted him
to jump into a concrete culvert to seek refuge.
Jonnel Emengga, chief of
the DPWH-MP District 2 Planning and Design Division, said according to an
eyewitness, the mountain across the DPWH building eroded around 4 p.m.,
eventually burying the whole two-story concrete structure and everything around
it.
Emengga said the DPWH
building was supposed to be empty, with only the two guards on duty.
He
said probably the guards allowed some residents to seek refuge at the height of
the typhoon.
Bulawe said the Bureau
of Fire personnel, DPWH workers, and residents were the first to help in the
search and rescue operations.
“It is difficult to
reach the place due to several landslides and mudflow on the road, which is
about two kilometers away from the Poblacion,” Bulawe said.
He
said it took a while for the rescue and retrieval operation to start, as flood
water and landslide mud on the way were waist-deep.
Bulawe said members of
the Municipal Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office were doing road
clearing operations around 4 p.m. on Tuesday, when the incident happened.
He said there was no
signal in the area that is why they only learned of the incident at 7 p.m. when
they returned to the MDRRMC office at Poblacion.
In a report, the
Mountain Province Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office said
all the three buildings in the DPWH compound were buried in the landslide.
It was learned that
those who sought refuge at the building were construction workers working for
the completion of the DPWH buildings.
"The
ill-fated building is beside a residential area and the strong rain and wind
could have prompted residents to seek refuge at the (concrete) office,"
Emengga said.
Describing
the structure and the location, the engineer said the building was around 200 square meters in floor area with two
stories already finished. At the back and beside it were buildings, which were
also being constructed.
Fronting the
building is a two-lane concrete highway located some eight meters from the base
of the building.
Chiyawan
earlier reported one of those killed in the Barangay Banawel landslide was a
citizen hoping to rescue those trapped when the landslide was triggered by the
rains and winds of Typhoon Rosita on Tuesday evening.
The mayor
said the chances of plucking out more survivors in the landslide is grim.
"These
22 missing are considered casualties, no chances of survival... Karamihan ng natabunan laborers ng second
building," he said. "It's completely ground zero. Wala kang makitang building, lahat putik,"
Mayor Chiyawan said.
Office of
Civil Defense Cordillera Regional Director Ruben Carandang saidrescue
operations proved to be a challenge because roads leading to ground zero are
only accessible by foot and rescuers have to resort to manual ways to search
for the laborers.
Carandang
said it was taxing to reach the landslide area because of the other landslides
that also occurred near the area.
"Maraming landslide
because there's a road-widening project ongoing there going to the DPWH
building," he said.
Chiyawan said
the laborers and nearby residents that sought shelter in the two DPWH
buildings, one of which was still under construction.
"Ginawang evacuation
center kasi malakas ang
hangin. Itong building ay concrete
so feasible for an evacuation center. In the afternoon humina ang hangin, bumalik sila sa
tahanan nila, pero naiwan ang laborers kasi ongoing ang construction ng
second building within the same area," he said.
The DPWH said
at least 17 other landslides were reported along the roads leading to Natonin.
The agency
said the location of the building was "never identified as a danger
zone" and passed a safety test six years ago.
"We
checked, but it was really safe. There were quality tests conducted and it was
constructed before 2012," Gladys Faith Claver of Mt. Province 2nd District
Engineering Office, said.
"Nagkataon lang na malakas ang ulan, na
talagang nag-mudslide kaya
tinulak ang buong building," Claver added.
Describing
the structure and the location, Emengga said the building is concrete and more or
less 200 square meters in floor area with two storeys finished.
At
the back and on its side are buildings which are also being constructed.
Emengga said this entire
area was wiped out by the landslide.
Presidential
Communications Operations Office (PCOO) Assistant Secretary Ana Marie Banaag
expressed grief over the fate of the landslide victims.
“I am one with our
kakailyan in Natonin, Mountain Province during these trying times,” said
Banaag, who was former mayor of Natonin.
A report from the
National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said national officials
have requested two Philippine Air Force to be able to immediately respond to
the Natonin tragedy.
The office is the
agency’s Mountain Province Second District Engineering Office for the
Cordillera Administrative Region.
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