Showing posts with label Earthquake 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Earthquake 2013. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Korean tourists cancel trips to Bohol, Cebu
SEOUL, South Korea —The devastating earthquake in Cebu and Bohol has affected tourism as well.
The Philippine Department of Tourism’s office here has received reports of cancellations of bookings to Cebu and Bohol, which happen to be the top two favorite destinations of Koreans.
Cancellations are already estimated to number around a thousand.
But Tourism Director and Attaché Maricon Basco-Ebron said travel agents are hoping to convince South Korean tourists to instead visit other destinations in the Philippines such as Boracay and Palawan.
“Bohol and Cebu are the favorite destinations of Koreans. We were alarmed actually. We’ve seen all the destinations ruined by the earthquake. Kaagad-agad, nagtawag kami ng aming mga ahente dito and mga airlines and we are given reports that there are a lot of cancellations. But I think it should not be a cause for alarm. Some of the agents are trying to bring them to other destinations in the Philippines. ‘Yun naman ang magandang resulta. That’s why we have to be fast on the draw,” Ebron said.
South Korea is the Philippines’s top source of tourists, contributing 1,031,155 tourist arrivals in 2012. The DOT is targeting to attract 1.2 million tourists this year.
Of the million South Korean tourists that visit the Philippines, about 30% go to Bohol and Cebu.
“I think the reason why they like Cebu is they find everything in one place. There’s culture there, there’s the beach and a lot of them go to Cebu for (English) studies,” Ebron said, adding that tourists also find Cebu very safe.
Ebron hopes that the cancellations of trips to Bohol and Cebu would only be temporary and that Koreans would only defer their trips or choose another destination in the Philippines.
“We’re trying to bring them to other destinations para imbes na mag-cancel sila for Cebu and Bohol perhaps we can bring them to Boracay or Palawan, to the other destinations that we have.”
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Friday, August 16, 2013
Strong quake shakes central New Zealand
Limited damage but widespread fear in capital, Wellington
WELLINGTON - A magnitude 6.5 earthquake struck south of New Zealand's capital on Friday, sending panicked Wellington workers and residents into the streets, but caused little major damage just weeks after a similar size quake shook the harbourside city.
The quake, which hit near the northern tip of New Zealand's South Island, was dangerously shallow at a depth of about 8 km (5 miles), similar to a deadly tremor that shattered the south island city of Christchurch in 2011.
"The building just shook and it went on and on and on. There's a lot of police out here and fire sirens going off. It's pretty frightening," said Chris Birks, General Manager of the Hotel d'Urville in Blenheim, near the quake epicentre.
Fire authorities said it was too early to assess the impact fully. There were reports of superficial damage to buildings from the quake, which shattered windows and sent items tumbling from supermarket shelves.
The U.S. Geological Survey originally measured the quake with a magnitude of 6.8 but later revised that figure down to 6.5. New Zealand quake monitoring service GNS Science put the magnitude at 6.2.
The quake did not trigger a widespread tsunami alert, according to the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center, although there was a series of strong aftershocks.
Some people were trapped in lifts in Wellington, a city of 400,000 that sprawls across hills along a major geological fault.
Air, rail and bus services were suspended while officials checked tracks, runways and roads for damage, and trading on New Zealand's NZX stock exchange was halted temporarily.
The quake sent the New Zealand dollar tumbling around a third of a U.S. cent to $0.8067.
There were also widespread power outages across the north of the South Island.
"It's very, very frightening and concerning for people, but it's been keep calm and carry on," said GNS Science's Bill Fry.
Fry said the impact of the quake had been concentrated on the capital, despite its epicentre being around 75 km (45 miles) to the south near the town of Seddon.
At a building site in central Wellington, construction workers hugged a dazed-looking colleague as he came down a scaffolded staircase from a 15-storey crane.
"It just rocked. It was rugged," said crane operator Dion Paki. "I saw that the elevator shaft nearby looked like it was ready to fall so I was hanging out the window yelling at people to get out of the way.
"When you're all the way up there, you can't do nothing."
New Zealand has been hit by a string of quakes since a shallow, 6.3 magnitude tremor devastated the Canterbury region in 2011, killing nearly 200 people and causing $30 billion in damage to Christchurch, the country's second largest city.
Earthquakes are common in New Zealand, whose two islands lie along the Australia-Pacific tectonic plate boundary.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
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