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Hundreds of aftershocks jolt Philippines as officials say death toll could rise
Hundreds of aftershocks jolt Philippines as officials say death toll could rise 32 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Joel Guinto and Virma Simonette Rivera , Manila Ground shakes as schoolchildren take cover in Philippines quake Hundreds of aftershocks have jolted southern Philippines after a magnitude 7.8 earthquake left dozens of people dead and hundreds more injured. The scale of devastation on Mindanao island is becoming clear as emergency responders reach coastal cities and towns. Officials fear the death toll, which currently stands at 37 dead and 487 injured, could rise. Buildings have collapsed and roads are either cracked or buried in landslides. Large swathes of the island still have no electricity or telephone connectivity. The earthquake, which struck on Monday morning, triggered tsunami warnings in Indonesia, south of Mindanao and across Japan's Pacific coast, displacing tens of thousands of people. "We hope the death toll does not increase further, but we are expecting it to move. Our priority today is search and rescue," Bernardo Alejandro, assistant secretary of the agency supervising disaster response, told DZMM radio. Close to 2,000 homes and 6,000 public schools have been damaged by their estimate so far, he added. The Philippines is routinely struck by earthquakes and volcanic eruptions because it lies on the so-called Pacific Ring of Fire, where there is increased seismic activity. Monday's quake was caused by a movement on the Cotabato Trench, off the country's southern tip. The trench, which is a source of huge quakes, generated a magnitude 7.9 earthquake in 1976, triggering a tsunami that killed about 5,000 people. Getty Images The earthquake flattened many buildings in southern Mindanao Monday's quake sowed panic in otherwise sleepy parts of Mindnao. Mobile phone and CCTV cameras captured scenes of buildings crumbling to the ground and children screaming as the ground shook. "Everyone felt dizzy, like we were being vigorously rocked on a hammock for more than two minutes. And the shaking was getting stronger by the second," said public school teacher Cesar Sundo in Lebak town. "Our students were shouting and crying while and we needed to calm them down. And it was thousands of students." Sundo said the students, who were mostly under 10 years old, stayed on school grounds until they were advised to go home. "We were literally saved by our flag ceremony," he said, explaining that they were outside when the quake struck Jollibee restaurant collapses in southern Philippine city after earthquake Science minister and veteran seismologist, Renato Solidum, said many students n survived because they were attending the morning assembly, which happens every Monday. "They were lucky to be outside. They were able to stay put and sit down," Solidum told DZMM in a separate interview. "These areas have experienced strong earthquakes before. This is one of the strongest." One viral video showed a branch of beloved fast-fo