| Hopes fade for Philippine villagers, 1,800 feared dead(Reuters)
 Updated: 2006-02-18 22:14
  
 
 
 LONG ROAD FOR RELIEF 
 The Philippines is hit by about 20 typhoons each year, with residents and 
environmental groups often blaming illegal logging or mining for making natural 
disasters worse. 
 A series of storms in late 2004 left about 1,800 people dead or presumed dead 
northeast of Manila. On Leyte island in 1991, more than 5,000 died in floods 
triggered by a typhoon. 
 
 
 
 President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo gathered all state agencies involved in 
disaster operations and said her priorities were to rescue the living, recover 
the dead and rebuild the community.
 |  The victims of a 
 mudslide are lined up on the ground in the remote farming village of 
 Guinsaugon, near Saint Bernard town, in southern Leyte province, central 
 Philippines February 18, 2006. Hopes faded on Saturday for some 1,800 
 people in a central Philippine village engulfed by a torrent of mud and 
 rock when a rain-soaked mountain collapsed on homes and a crowded school. 
 [Reuters]
 |  "I call on each Filipino to pray for the victims and the survivors," Arroyo 
said in a statement. "It breaks my heart to think of those precious 
schoolchildren whose innocence and hope have been so tragically snuffed out." 
 C-130 transport planes carried supplies to Tacloban's airport, leaving 
military trucks to make at least a six-hour trip to Guinsaugon with medicine, 
rice and clothes from UNICEF and USAID. 
 The United Nations said it was sending a team to help determine emergency 
needs and was making an immediate grant of $50,000 as part of the international 
response. 
 The International Federation of the Red Cross said it feared the death toll 
would be high. It was sending trauma kits, other relief goods and about $150,000 
in initial aid. 
 The United States sent two naval vessels with 17 helicopters and nearly 1,000 
soldiers, already in the Philippines for annual military exercises, to the 
coastal area. 
 Australia offered A$1 million ($740,000) to help evacuate survivors, set up 
shelters and provide emergency items. 
 
 
 
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