Corruption makes disasters deadlier cardinal warns as Philippine quake kills 72

Corruption makes disasters deadlier cardinal warns as Philippine quake kills 72
The interior of the Archdiocesan Shrine and Parish of Sta. Rosa de Lima in Cebu, damaged by the 6.9-magnitude earthquake. Photo credit: LiCAS News/Archdiocese of Cebu

MANILA (LiCAS News): Cardinal Pablo Virgilio David of Kalookan, the head of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines warned that disasters turn deadlier when corruption hollows out public works, as the country reeled from the 6.9-magnitude earthquake that struck Cebu on September 30.

“We grieve for those who perished in Cebu. But we must also grieve for the shameless chain of corruption that led to their death,” he said. “Their blood cries out not only against natural calamity but against human greed.”

Cardinal David pointed to allegations that a significant portion of public infrastructure budgets are lost to kickbacks before construction even begins, leaving weakened structures unable to withstand natural forces. 

“Whether it is a bridge, a basketball court, a multi-purpose hall, or a flood control system—when corruption consumes 70 per cent of the lifeblood of public works, what remains is too brittle to withstand even normal wear and tear, much less a 6.7-magnitude earthquake,” he said.

The cardinal’s warning comes as the Philippines faces controversies over allegations of widespread corruption in government infrastructure projects. 

We grieve for those who perished in Cebu. But we must also grieve for the shameless chain of corruption that led to their death

Cardinal David

The Cebu earthquake, he said, was a painful reminder that when corruption eats into construction budgets, the cost is paid in human lives.

The quake struck late September 30 off the northern Cebu Island near Bogo City, according to the US Geological Survey. 

On October 2, government officials had confirmed 72 deaths, with at least 294 people injured and nd around 20,000 had fled their homes.

Authorities warned that more people could be trapped in collapsed structures and appealed for volunteer medics. 

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The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said the area had recorded 379 aftershocks. Power lines snapped, roads cracked, and entire villages were left isolated.

Archbishop Alberto Uy of Cebu immediately ordered parishes to conduct structural assessments and suspend activities inside the churches until engineers certified their safety

Archbishop Alberto Uy of Cebu immediately ordered parishes to conduct structural assessments and suspend activities inside the churches until engineers certified their safety. Just earlier that day, nearly 60 bishops had gathered for his installation Mass at the Cebu Metropolitan Cathedral. 

The archbishop urged the faithful “to refrain from using your churches for the celebration of the Holy Mass until the proper experts have carried out the assessment and declared the structures safe for use.”

Archbishop Uy also called on Catholics to entrust themselves to God’s protection “from every harm, and guide us to safety and peace.”

In his homily, the archbishop expressed his intention “to embrace that call in my life as shepherd” of the Catholic faithful in Cebu.

The National Council of Churches in the Philippines, the country’s mainline Protestants, issued a prayer, asking that the most vulnerable be remembered.

“We bring before you those who are traumatized and anxious, especially the unseen and unheard—the women and children, people with disabilities, and those from poor communities. May none of them be left behind in the healing process,” it said.

Bishop Glenn Corsiga of Ipil was in Cebu to attend the installation Mass of Archbishop Uy when the quake struck. He recalled fleeing barefoot from his hotel as the building swayed violently. 

“The loud sound of thunder-like growl can be heard all over as we run to save our lives, covering our heads as taught by and learned from earthquake drills,” he wrote.

Bishop Corsiga urged preparedness but also compassion for those most affected. “Let us be supportive of the needs of victims of calamities, pray for the souls of those who have died, and assist their respective families,” he said. 

The bishop called on communities to extend generosity as a source of hope, saying, “May we gather the bounty of generous hearts as to make the suffering feel there is hope right in their front yards…and that hope indomitably begins with people who are kind-hearted.” 

Cardinal David said the tragedy in Cebu is a reminder that natural disasters expose more than structural weaknesses. 

“May God have mercy on the innocent victims. And may He also have mercy on the souls of those who, for a price, have betrayed the trust of the people and brought ruin upon their own nation,” he said.

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