Friday, January 6, 2012

COMPOSTELA MINING LANDSLIDE

Compostela Valley, Philippines.(AP) - Philippine rescuers resumed the search Friday for up to 150 people who remained missing a day after a deadly landslide buried a remote gold mining community in the country's south, the military source said. At least 28 people were killed on Mindanao island before dawn on Thursday when a rock and mud avalanche buried a mountain settlement of gold prospectors who had refused to leave an area declared too dangerous for habitation. Some 23 bodies were already identified while the number of missing in the landslide that hit Diat community in Napnapan village here rose to 46 as of Saturday. Rhona Siojo, municipal social welfare officer, told that 27 of the bodies were already brought down and given to their families. Five of those killed were children aged four to 16 years old. A group of volunteers prepared to go up to the gold rush site to help about 140 soldiers and police there, who resumed the search at first light as the rains ceased, local military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Lyndon Paniza said. Local Government Secretary Jesse Robredo flew over the area on Friday and ordered in a talk with local officials the immediate shutting down of mining operations there and the eviction of close to 2,000 residents composed of miners and their families. "We want this implemented within two weeks and the army and police would be mobilized to carry out the forced eviction of settlers and the tearing down of shanties," said Robredo. "We're not losing hope in our search for survivors. We will not shift to (corpse) retrieval mode until 72 hours had passed," he told AFP in a telephone interview from Pantukan town, where more rescuers are being mustered. Rescuers are pushing tubes into the mouths of mine shafts that tunnel into the mountainside in the hope that some trapped miners could still be alive in them, but so far there had been no signs of life, he conceded. Pantukan and nearby Monkayo, both on the west flank of Mindanao's Pacific Cordilleras mountains, have drawn gold prospectors for years despite frequent, deadly landslides. Their largely unregulated tunnelling have made the mountainside unstable, government experts say, and heavy rains since last month had saturated the earth on top, helping to trigger the earthfall. The government said the miners had been told to leave the area as early as 2008, but local officials failed to enforce the ban. After the latest disaster, Paniza said the local government ordered the rest of the community of about 1,000 people to leave the area immediately amid concern of more landslips. Compostela Valley Provincial Governor Arturo Uy admitted it would not be easy to implement the order as those who would be affected would lose their livelihood. "Many of the victims' relatives want to help out in the rescue but they have no knowledge of the proper rescue techniques," Paniza said. "The area is still critical and we expect other portions to eventually cave in." The survivors will be forced to relocate to a flatter area about 1.5 kilometres (about a mile) away, he added.

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