Outdoor hospitals, shaken communities as Philippine quake toll hits 41
Doctors treated patients in tents set up under a scorching Philippine sun on Tuesday (June 9, 2026), including helping a young mother give birth, as
Doctors treated patients in tents set up under a scorching Philippine sun on Tuesday (June 9, 2026), including helping a young mother give birth, as the death toll from a major earthquake that collapsed buildings topped 40. Thousands remained displaced, and more than 450 were injured following the magnitude-7.8 quake that struck off the southern island of Mindanao on Monday (June 8, 2026), according to national and local disaster agencies, with four people now believed missing. In the hardest-hit Sarangani province, some areas remain accessible only by helicopter, while fears of aftershocks were slowing rescue efforts, local officials told reporters at a Tuesday (June 9, 2026) briefing. “There are still aftershocks, so the rescuers are very cautious in their approach. That’s a challenge,” said regional civil defence chief Rodrigo Sosmena. A series of powerful aftershocks rocked the area from about two hours after the first quake, while hundreds of tiny tremors followed. Infrastructure damage, meanwhile, means some communities will be cut off for at least a week because of the damage to roads and the collapse of a bridge.
At a hospital just outside General Santos, the region’s largest city, AFP reporters heard cries of “push” then an infant’s cries as a mother gave birth outdoors behind a makeshift screen. In Glan municipality, where at least 13 people were buried in their homes by a landslide, staff at another hospital told AFP more than 60 patients were on beds outside the facility due to fears for the building’s structural integrity. “The hospital sustained a lot of damage,” she said. “The municipal engineer decided we could not use the building.” As of Tuesday afternoon (June 9, 2026), the death toll from provincial sources contacted by AFP stood at 41. ‘Back to zero’ Residents who spoke to AFP described scenes of terror during the earthquake, with many saying the area was no longer safe enough to call home. “I think everything needs to be demolished,” casino worker Eduardo Gutierrez Jr. said after returning to his apartment to retrieve belongings now covered in mud. “When I got out the door, the entire apartment row was swaying,” he said of his experience during the quake.
“We saw walls collapsing, the floors opening up. And then water and mud began spurting up from underneath the flooring.” Rosalynne Singson told AFP the earthquake had left her “no choice” but to move. “It’s hard to accept. (Our house) probably needs to be demolished, because we were told we’re on top of a faultline,” she said. “It’s really back to zero,” she added. At the hospital outside General Santos, Lourdes Camia said she believed her brother-in-law, who was being treated for a heart attack, was safer outside, despite the heat. “I can see the cracks (of the wall) from here,” she said. “If there is another quake, I’m scared the hospital will collapse,” she said. Recovery efforts On Tuesday morning (June 9, 2026), rescuers at the ruins of what had been a neighbourhood grocery resumed efforts to recover two store employees who were inside when the building crumpled. AFP journalists saw rescue dogs and their handlers scour the pile of broken concrete and jagged metal bars. One rescuer told reporters the effort was now one of recovery rather than rescue, though a more senior official later insisted that a formal decision had yet to be made.
