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Friday, March 29, 2024

Nickel Asia ERTs first to respond to quake-hit area

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The Provincial Government of Cotabato has acknowledged the first responders to Makilala, a town in North Cotabato reported to be hardest hit by the recent series of earthquakes that devastated some parts of Mindanao.

Nickel Asia ERTs first to respond to quake-hit area
Rolie Jamil, a member of Nickel Asia’s Emergency Response Team, lifts a sack of rice as he was among the first responders to the earthquake in North Cotabato. The NAC-ERT team, composed of 58 volunteer-employees of Nickel Asia, assisted families affected by a landslide caused by the quake in Barangay Bato.

The Emergency Response Team from Nickel Asia Corporation’s operating company is one of them.

The NAC miners were among the first responders when Cotabato called for help. Taganito Mining Corp., a subsidiary of NAC, was among the first to send an ERT, arriving a day after the magnitude 6.5 quake shook Makilala and its adjacent towns.

Following suit and bringing more food and water were two other NAC subsidiaries—Cagdianao Mining Corp., which travelled all the way from Dinagat Island, and Hinatuan Mining Corp. from Surigao del Norte.

The expertise of NAC ERTs was quickly put to use when they were assigned to barangay Bato, where a landslide caused at least six casualties. The team transported to safety some 127 residents together with their remaining possessions, including pigs and pet dogs.

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The NAC teams performed first aid and distributed food packages and drinking water, mosquito nets, and hundreds of meters of blue canvass sheets as tent material to other families.

The ERTs train regularly and extensively to be able to respond quickly and efficiently during disasters such as earthquakes and strong typhoons, the company said in a statement.

Makilala is located in the southeast of Cotabato Province, next to Davao City. The town has 38 barangays.

According to Ailyn Tocmo, a government employee from Barangay Kisante who was assigned to the registration center in Makilala: “All barangays were badly affected with some people continuing to stay outdoors, afraid that more aftershocks would hit.”

Teresa Palban, a “kagawad” from Barangay Biangan, said all the houses are deemed “unsafe” until cleared and declared otherwise, as the residents await the local government to guide them as to when it is safe to go back to their homes.

The NAC ERTs also provided supplies and words of comfort to Biangan’s 143 families.

Palban thanked the NAC team for the food packs and emphasized that the mosquito nets and canvass sheets are very much appreciated, since many of them still sleep outdoors.

A man who introduced himself only as Loloy thanked the NAC ERTs specifically for the drinking water. He was from Barangay Bato and his home was buried by the landslide.

“I think it will be many more months before we can go back to rebuild our home, the future is uncertain,” he said.

TMC also got the support of its contractors and mining services providers – FITZ-SouthernPhil Development and Marketing Corp.; HPK Construction; Nickelbase, Inc.; Tango Romeo General Construction; and Taganito Mining Employees Multi-Purpose Cooperative. Together, they pooled 3,000 food packs and 2,086 gallons of drinking water.

CMC brought 500 food packs and 200 meters of blue sheet canvass, plus 500 10-liter bottles of drinking water.

HMC followed with 250 food packs, 250 bottles of 6.6-liter drinking water, and 300 meters of blue canvass sheets, cut in size for use as roofs and sleeping mats.

Dominga Bangot, a resident of Makilala, said they know the local government is ready to help them, but they appreciated the flock of private organizations coming from all over the country.

“We appreciate the food and water they bring but the people who come here make us feel better and somehow less afraid,” Bangot said.

Engineer Rennan Cuadrillero of TMC, the overall head of the NAC ERTs deployed in Cotabato, attests to how warmly the response teams were welcomed and appreciated.

“We get generous expressions of ‘thank you’ and the people are cooperative, they are easy to organize when it comes to distribution of goods, our job here is challenging but motivating,” Cuadrillero shared.

ERT members are volunteer-employees from NAC’s mining companies composed of mining engineers and geologists, medical practitioners and first-aiders, heavy equipment operators and carpenters, foresters and environment technologists, and social workers, headed and organized by the company’s Safety Department.

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