Categories: World News

Rescuers racing to find dozens still missing


AFP via Getty Images

More than 30 people are thought to be missing following the landslide in Cebu

Rescue workers are racing to find dozens of people still missing following a landslide at a landfill site in the central Philippines that occurred earlier this week, an official has said.

Mayor Nestor Archival said on Saturday that signs of life had been detected at the site in Cebu City, two days after the incident.

Four people have been confirmed dead so far, Archival said, while 12 others have been taken to hospital.

Conditions for emergency services working at the site were challenging, the mayor added, with unstable debris posing a hazard and crew waiting for better equipment to arrive.

The privately-owned Binaliw landfill collapsed on Thursday while 110 workers were on site, officials said.

Archival said in a Facebook post on Saturday morning: “Authorities confirmed the presence of detected signs of life in specific areas, requiring continued careful excavation and the deployment of a more advanced 50-ton crane.”

Relatives of those missing have been waiting anxiously for any news of their whereabouts. More than 30 people, all workers at the landfill, are thought to be missing.

“We are just hoping that we can get someone alive… We are racing against time, that’s why our deployment is 24/7,” Cebu City councillor Dave Tumulak, chairman of the city’s disaster council, told news agency AFP.

AFP via Getty Images

Relatives of the missing are waiting anxiously for any news of their loved ones

Jerahmey Espinoza, whose husband is missing, told news agency Reuters at the site on Saturday: “They haven’t seen him or located him ever since the disaster happened. We’re still hopeful that he’s alive.”

The cause of the collapse remains unclear, but Cebu City councillor Joel Garganera previously said it was likely the result of poor waste management practices.

Operators had been cutting into the mountain, digging the soil out and then piling garbage to form another mountain of waste, Garganera told local newspaper The Freeman on Friday.

The Binaliw landfill covers an area of about 15 hectares (37 acres).

Landfills are common in major Philippine cities like Cebu, which is the trading centre and transportation gateway of the Visayas, the archipelago nation’s central islands.



Source link

samuca272

Recent Posts

Naked images remained in Epstein files despite outcry

Ahead of the deadline set by Congress, deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the files…

10 minutos ago

US must be prudent when supplying arms to Taiwan, Xi tells Trump

Their call comes in the wake of a flurry of visits by Western leaders to…

1 hora ago

55,000 Ukrainian soldiers killed in war with Russia, Zelensky says

Special US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, Trump's son-in-law, held talks with Russian and…

2 horas ago

Dozens of Muslims 'massacred' in Nigeria for refusing to join jihadists, says governor

At least 78 bodies have been buried, while there are fears that around 170 people…

3 horas ago

Son of Norway’s Crown Princess gives evidence as rape trial continues

The son of Norway's Crown Princess is due to return to a court in Oslo…

17 horas ago

Fearing Russia will seize her town, war widow moves husband's grave to Kyiv

Russia's gains on the battlefield have forced Natalia to rebury her husband in Kyiv. Source…

18 horas ago