Kids among dead in Philippines quake

Bartolome Bautista, Deputy Director of Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) points to the epicenter of the magnitude 6.9 earthquake which hit central Philippines on Monday Feb.6, 2012 during a news conference at suburban Quezon city northeast of Manila, Philippines. Officials said , the quake in central Philippines killed at least 5 people as it destroyed buildings, triggered landslides that buried dozens of houses, trapping residents and listed 29 more as missing. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

Bartolome Bautista, Deputy Director of Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) points to the epicenter of the magnitude 6.9 earthquake which hit central Philippines on Monday Feb.6, 2012 during a news conference at suburban Quezon city northeast of Manila, Philippines. Officials said , the quake in central Philippines killed at least 5 people as it destroyed buildings, triggered landslides that buried dozens of houses, trapping residents and listed 29 more as missing. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

Published Feb 6, 2012

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Manila - A magnitude 6.7 earthquake off the central Philippine island of Negros killed at least seven people on Monday, including two children, with government offices and schools ordered to close after at least 40 aftershocks.

A grade-six pupil died after being plucked out from a collapsed chapel wall while a nine-year-old girl was killed when the concrete wall of a school collapsed, officials said.

A three-storey building caved in and some seaside cottages were destroyed by waves in La Libertad, Negros Oriental, near the epicentre of the quake 5km off the shore of Tayasan town and at a depth of 10 km, according to local calculations.

The US Geological Survey had measured the quake at magnitude 6.7 and at a depth of 20km.

The volcanology and seismology institute lifted a tsunami alert. Some roads, bridges and houses sustained cracks, but major roads remained passable.

“While the threat of immediate danger appears to have passed, we urge the people in affected areas to remain watchful and calm, and to co-operate with the authorities,” a presidential spokesman said.

Television footage showed people scurrying out of buildings, residents converging in open spaces and frightened school children in tears.

“I have advised our people to return to their homes and stay calm. I appeal to our president for help. We're just recovering from Typhoon Sending and now this earthquake,” Negros Oriental Governor Roel Degamo said in a television interview, referring to a typhoon which killed about 1 250 people in the southern Philippines in December.

The quake was felt in areas within a radius of about 70 miles.

Over the weekend, the USGS also recorded a magnitude 5.6 quake off the shore of Samar province also in central Philippines and situated northwest of Negros.

The Philippines lies on the Pacific “Ring of Fire” and is prone to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. A 7.8 magnitude quake in 1990 in the northern Philippines killed more than 1 600 people. - Reuters

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