A 6.5-magnitude
earthquake killed at least two people in the central Philippines on Thursday,
with more than five people still trapped inside a collapsed commercial
building, officials said.
An 18-year-old
woman died after being hit by falling debris in Ormoc City on Leyte island,
near the epicentre of the quake, police said.
Elsewhere, rescuers
pulled out eight survivors and one body from a collapsed three-storey structure
in the town of Kananga, also on Leyte island, Kananga Vice Mayor Elmer Codilla
told AFP.
"Eight have
been rescued. All are in the hospital," he said, declining to say if their
injuries were serious.
Among those rescued
were two people who previously sent SMS messages under the rubble, calling for
help, he said.
"There are six
or seven still inside. Definitely more than five but less than ten," he
added.
Among those still
trapped are two children who have been reached by rescuers but who still cannot
be extricated from the rubble, the vice-mayor said.
"We have given
them water," he added.
Dominico Petilla,
the governor of Leyte province, said rescue personnel, ambulances and heavy
equipment have been sent to the mountainous town of about 50,000 people.
"They're still
trying to pull out the injured," Petilla told local television.
The 10-year-old
building housed a small hotel upstairs and shops on the ground floor, officials
said.
- Quake brings
darkness -
The quake hit at a
depth of around six kilometres (four miles), the US Geological Survey said.
There was no
warning of a tsunami, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said.
Large parts of
Leyte were devastated by super typhoon Haiyan in November 2013. Huge
tsunami-like waves smashed the city of Tacloban and nearby areas, leaving 7,350
people dead or missing.
Tacloban and Ormoc,
the island's other main city, largely escaped damage this time, residents
contacted by telephone told AFP.
However the entire
island of Leyte as well as neighbouring islands were still without power after
the quake caused geothermal plants on the island to shut down, an energy
department statement said.
While the plants
were soon back online, inspectors were still searching for damage to power
lines, the department said, adding that it could take "one or two weeks"
to fully restore power.
Roy Ribo, an
official with a farmers' organisation who was visiting Kananga, said he watched
schoolchildren panic as their teachers herded them out of their classrooms for
safety after the quake.
"Many children
were hysterical. They were frantic, crying," he added.
Father Romy
Salazar, the Catholic parish priest of the Leyte town of Jaro at the quake's
epicentre, told AFP residents rushed out of their homes as the town shook.
"I was inside
the church. I was forced to hold on to the main door," Salazar said, but
added he had not seen any major damage in the town.
In February, a
6.5-magnitude quake killed eight people and left more than 250 injured outside
the southern city of Surigao.
The following month
a 5.9-magnitude tremor killed one person there in March.
Before the Surigao
quakes, the last fatal earthquake to hit the country was a 7.1-magnitude tremor
that left more than 220 people dead and destroyed historic churches when it
struck the central islands in October 2013.
The Philippines
lies on the so-called Ring of Fire, a vast Pacific Ocean region where many
quakes and volcanic eruptions occur.

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