A powerful 6.9-magnitude earthquake ripped through central Philippines late September 30 night, leaving at least 69 people dead and more than 150 injured, while dozens remain trapped beneath the rubble of collapsed homes, buildings, and landslides. The quake’s epicentre was traced to just 17 kilometres northeast of Bogo, a coastal city of 90,000 in Cebu province, a region known more for its beaches and tourism than scenes of mass destruction.
Officials warned the toll was “fluid and expected to rise” as exhausted rescuers battled through the night, digging with bare hands, shovels, and limited heavy machinery to reach survivors.
Bogo bore the brunt of the disaster, with at least 14 confirmed deaths, including families buried alive when a landslide swallowed a cluster of shanties in a mountain village. The town hospital was quickly overwhelmed, forcing staff to treat patients on stretchers laid out in parking lots and even along roadside tents.
“We are overwhelmed, and many patients have been moved to Cebu City,” said rescuer Teddy Fontillas, 56, who admitted he had not slept in more than 24 hours.
Firefighter Rey Caete described the terrifying moment the quake struck. “We were about to retire for the day when the ground shook violently. We rushed out but stumbled to the ground. A wall of our fire station collapsed, injuring firefighters and nearby residents,” he told reporters.
Hundreds of residents, too terrified to return to their cracked and crumbling homes, spent the night in open fields, braving aftershocks that numbered in the hundreds.
In San Remigio, a nearby town, six fatalities were confirmed, including three coast guard officers, a firefighter, and a child. Vice Mayor Alfie Reynes issued a desperate appeal: “Our water system is down. We need food, clean water, and urgent medical help.”
The quake’s fury also toppled heritage structures. In Daanbantayan, a historic Roman Catholic church crumbled, while on Bantayan island, dramatic footage showed the belfry of another centuries-old church collapsing into the courtyard as terrified residents screamed. “I heard a booming noise, then stones started falling. It was surreal,” said Martham Pacilan, 25, who narrowly escaped injury.
The Cebu Provincial Hospital in Bogo became the epicentre of medical chaos. Journalists witnessed black body bags being loaded into vans, while injured children cried in makeshift tents under tarpaulins as doctors stitched wounds by flashlight. “We are tending to the injured outside because of the sheer volume,” admitted Cebu Governor Pamela Baricuatro, who warned that “the destruction could be worse than we think.”
The quake reverberated across the island of Cebu, damaging bridges, schools, and businesses. In Cebu City, terrified shoppers fled a mall as its ceiling collapsed. “It felt as if the Earth stopped spinning,” said Jayford Maranga, 21, an online merchant who ducked under a restaurant table.
A commercial building and a school in Bantayan collapsed, while a fast-food restaurant in Bogo was left in ruins. Roads cracked open in nearby Tabogon, while villages reported power blackouts, flooding, and uprooted trees.
Initially, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) issued a tsunami warning for Cebu, Leyte, and Biliran, urging coastal residents to move inland. The alert was later lifted when no unusual wave activity was detected.
But the fear was compounded by a relentless series of 379 aftershocks, which forced thousands to remain outdoors in evacuation camps, unsure if their homes would still stand by morning. The quake struck at 9:59 pm local time (1359 GMT September) and was first measured at 7.0 before being revised to 6.9, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS).
The Philippines, located on the volatile Pacific “Ring of Fire,” is no stranger to nature’s fury. It faces about 20 typhoons annually, regular volcanic eruptions, and near-daily earthquakes. But the scale of devastation in Cebu has reignited questions about preparedness, infrastructure resilience, and response capacity.
Provincial rescue official Wilson Ramos cautioned that many people were feared trapped beneath collapsed buildings. “The night made everything harder, and aftershocks made it dangerous to dig. But time is running out.”



















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