MANILA, Philippines (Update 2 3:23 p.m.) — Rescuers were scrambling Tuesday to reach dozens of people feared buried under a supermarket building in Porac, Pampanga that collapsed a day earlier in a powerful earthquake, as the death toll climbed to 16.
The 6.1 magnitude quake struck the town of Castillejos, Zambales, northwest of the capital, on Monday, state volcanologists at Phivolcs said, heavily damaging an airport and sending terrified locals fleeing swaying high-rises.
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The worst of the damage was in the province of Pampanga, which was the site of 15 fatalities, disaster officials said. Fourteen people were reported missing in Central Luzon while dozens of others were injured by falling rubble, including in Manila.
The toll could rise as crews fanned out across the region to assess damage in isolated hamlets that lost power and communications in one of the area's strongest tremors in years.
Over 400 aftershocks have been registered since the initial quake.
At least 24 trapped inside
Scores of rescuers in the town of Porac were wielding cranes and jackhammers to peel back the pancaked concrete structure of the four-story Chuzon Supermarket building where the Red Cross said 24 people were unaccounted for.
"Every minute, every second is critical in this rescue," Cris Palcis, a volunteer sniffer dog handler, told AFP. "Time is short for the people under the rubble so we have to be quick."
Pampanga Gov. Lilia Pineda told journalists that rescuers could still hear at least one person trapped beneath the rubble, but the digging was proceeding delicately to avoid accidentally crushing the survivor.
The quake also damaged several centuries-old churches which were crowded with worshippers in recent days as the majority-Catholic Philippines marked the Easter holiday.
'Really swaying'
Father Roland Moraleja, who is based in Porac, said the 18th-century belfry of Saint Catherine of Alexandria church collapsed in the quake.
"It was the only part left from the old church," he told AFP. "The historical value is now gone, but we are hopeful that it will rise again."
High-rise buildings in the capital swayed after the tremor struck Monday evening, leaving some with large cracks in their walls.