A six-year-old girl was among three people killed when a 6.8-magnitude earthquake struck the southern Philippines island of Mindanao on Sunday.
The girl was inside her family's house when the building collapsed and
killed her, the province's governor, Douglas Cagas, told CNN.
Fire
Service director Chief Superintendent Samuel Tadeo confirmed the three
deaths and also said a market in Padada had collapsed.
The
country's second-largest island is a popular tourist destination, and
videos posted on social media showed hotel pools dramatically
overflowing and mass evacuations of shoppers from malls.
Residents reported schools had been severely damaged -- luckily empty of students at the time, as the quake happened on a Sunday. Governor Douglas Cagas of the island's Davao del
Sur province said a three-story building had also collapsed.
Classes have now been suspended for Monday, and bridges closed due to cracks, Davao city officials said.
The country's President Rodrigo Duterte was at his home in Davao, the largest city on the island, at the time of the quake, reported state-run Philippine News Agency (PNA). He was unhurt, although his house reportedly "sustained several cracks in the walls."
There were several aftershocks in nearby
provinces, including a 5.0 magnitude, according to the US Geological
Survey. It added that there was no tsunami threat, as the quake struck inland and not the water.
It's the
latest in a serious of quakes to strike the island in recent months. In
October another series of 6.6 and 6.5-magnitude quakes struck Mindanao,
killing 14 and injuring more than 400
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