2 trapped people alive after Philippines building collapse; rescue continues

Two people feared trapped after a building collapse in the ​Philippines were alive and communicating with rescuers on Sunday, an official said, as rescue efforts continued.

Two people feared trapped after a building collapse in the ​Philippines were alive and communicating with rescuers on Sunday, an official said, as rescue efforts continued. (Libin Jose, Alamy via Reuters Connect)


Save Story

Estimated read time: 1-2 minutes

MANILA, Philippines — Two people feared trapped after a building collapse in the ​Philippines were alive and communicating with rescuers on Sunday, an official said, as rescue efforts continued.

"They are in ‌constant communication. We are awaiting more details, but our rescuers are doing their best ⁠to pull the survivors out ​of the rubble," Jay Pelayo, ⁠information officer for Angeles City, north of the capital Manila, told ‌Reuters.

The number rescued ‌in the collapse of the nine-story building under construction, including ⁠those in the vicinity, has ⁠risen to 24, with no deaths reported, Pelayo said in a phone interview. Among the rescued was a 51-year-old Malaysian national who was staying in a nearby budget hotel, which was damaged when the concrete structure collapsed.

It was unclear how ‌many were still feared trapped, with ​a site engineer saying 19 people had been working at the site, Pelayo said. "We are trying to determine whether all 19 were there."

He had told DZBB radio that 30 to 40 people were feared trapped, based on information from a site foreman who was among those who escaped.

It was not ​immediately clear what caused the collapse, but the city engineer was ‌reviewing the construction ‌history, Pelayo ⁠said, adding that moving the concrete debris was a challenge for rescuers.

Images shared by DZBB showed the building reduced to a heap of concrete and twisted metal, covered in green netting. Ambulances ‌were on standby and ​heavy equipment on its way to ‌assist in the ⁠rescue, Pelayo ​said.

Most recent World stories

Related topics

Karen Lema and Eloisa Lopez

    STAY IN THE KNOW

    Get informative articles and interesting stories delivered to your inbox weekly. Subscribe to the KSL.com Trending 5.
    By subscribing, you acknowledge and agree to KSL.com's Terms of Use and Privacy Notice.
    Newsletter Signup

    KSL Weather Forecast

    KSL Weather Forecast
    Play button