7.6-magnitude earthquake off southern Philippines causes damage and tsunami evacuations

Update 7.6-magnitude earthquake off southern Philippines causes damage and tsunami evacuations
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This handout photo from Golden Cornucopia - Davao de Oro State College taken and received on October 10, 2025, shows students helping a fellow student as they gather outside the school buildings after an earthquake in Davao de Oro, Mindanao. (Handout photo via AFP)
Update 7.6-magnitude earthquake off southern Philippines causes damage and tsunami evacuations
2 / 4
This handout photo from Golden Cornucopia - Davao de Oro State College taken and received on October 10, 2025, shows students helping a fellow student as they gather outside the school buildings after an earthquake in Davao de Oro, Mindanao. (Handout photo via AFP)
Update 7.6-magnitude earthquake off southern Philippines causes damage and tsunami evacuations
3 / 4
This handout photo from Golden Cornucopia - Davao de Oro State College taken and received on October 10, 2025, shows students helping a fellow student as they gather outside the school buildings after an earthquake in Davao de Oro, Mindanao. (Handout photo via AFP)
Update 7.6-magnitude earthquake off southern Philippines causes damage and tsunami evacuations
4 / 4
This handout photo from Golden Cornucopia - Davao de Oro State College taken and received on October 10, 2025, shows students helping a fellow student as they gather outside the school buildings after an earthquake in Davao de Oro, Mindanao. (Handout photo via AFP)
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Updated 10 October 2025
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7.6-magnitude earthquake off southern Philippines causes damage and tsunami evacuations

7.6-magnitude earthquake off southern Philippines causes damage and tsunami evacuations
  • Tsunami warnings for Philippines, Indonesia
  • Philippine provincial governor says some reports of damage

MANILA, Philippines: An offshore earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 7.6 hit off a southern Philippine province Friday morning, sending people out of houses and buildings in panic, knocking out power and prompting officials to order villagers to evacuate from the coastlines of nearby provinces due to a possible tsunami.
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said the potential damage was being assessed and rescue teams and relief operations were being prepared and would be deployed when it was safe to do so.
The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said it was expecting damage and aftershocks from the earthquake, which was centered at sea about 62 kilometers (38 miles) southeast of Manay town in Davao Oriental province and was caused by movement in a fault at a shallow depth of 10 kilometers (6 miles).




US Geological Survey illustration map

“I was driving my car when it suddenly swayed and I saw powerlines swaying wildly. People darted out of houses and buildings as the ground shook and electricity came off,” Jun Saavedra, a disaster-mitigation officer of Gov. Generoso town in Davao Oriental, told The Associated Press by cellphone.
“We’ve had earthquakes in the past, but this was the strongest,” Saavedra said, adding that the intense ground swaying caused cracks in several buildings, including schools.
At least 50 students from a high school in his town were brought to a hospital by ambulance after either fainting or becoming dizzy due to the earthquake, Saavedra said.
Gov. Generoso is a town about 100 kilometers (62 miles) south of Manay, where classes in all levels were also suspended.
Children evacuated schools in Davao city, which has about 5.4 million people and is the biggest city near the epicenter, about 250 kilometers (155 miles) west of Davao Oriental province.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Honolulu said hazardous waves were possible within 300 kilometers (186 miles) of the epicenter. It said waves up to 3 meters (10 feet) above normal tides were possible on some Philippine coasts, and smaller waves were possible in Indonesia and Palau.




Google map showing Davao region nin Mindanao where the earthquake struck at 9:43 a.m., Philippine time. 

Office of Civil Defense deputy administrator Bernardo Rafaelito Alejandro IV warned that tsunami waves could hit six nearby coastal provinces from Davao Oriental up to two hours after the earthquake struck at 9:43 a.m. He asked people to immediately move to higher ground or further inland away from coastal areas.
“We urge these coastal communities to be on alert and immediately evacuate to higher grounds until further notice,” Alejandro said in a video news briefing.
“Owners of boats in harbors and those in the coastal areas...should secure their boats and move away from the waterfronts,” he said.
Indonesia’s Meteorology, Climatology, and Geophysics Agency said small tsunami waves were detected in North Sulawesi province with heights ranging from 3.5 to 17 centimeters (1.3 to 6.7 inches) in Melonguane, Beo, Essang and Ganalo in Talaud Islands districts. People were warned to stay away from beaches and riverbanks.
The Philippines is still recovering from a Sept. 30 earthquake with a magnitude of 6.9 that left at least 74 people dead and displaced thousands of people in the central province of Cebu, particularly Bogo city and outlying towns.
One of the world’s most disaster-prone countries, the Philippines is often hit by earthquakes and volcanic eruptions because of its location on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an arc of seismic faults around the ocean.
The archipelago also is lashed by about 20 typhoons and storms each year, making disaster response a major task of the government and volunteer groups.


Tanzania charges hundreds with treason and issues arrest warrants for more opposition figures

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Tanzania charges hundreds with treason and issues arrest warrants for more opposition figures

Tanzania charges hundreds with treason and issues arrest warrants for more opposition figures
NAIROBI: Tanzanian authorities charged hundreds of people with treason over demonstrations around disputed polls last month, in a major escalation of political tension as the country reels from violence in which an unknown number of people were killed.
In addition to dozens criminally charged a day earlier in Dar es Salaam, dozens more face similar treason charges elsewhere in the East African country according to numerous charge sheets that became publicly available Saturday.
Police also issued arrest warrants for some of the top opposition officials who had not yet been jailed. They include Brenda Rupia, communications director for the Chadema opposition group, as well as John Mnyika, its secretary-general.
Chadema is Tanzania’s leading opposition party. Its leader, Tundu Lissu, has been jailed for several months and also faces treason charges after he urged electoral reforms ahead of voting on Oct. 29.
Authorities face questions over the death toll after security forces tried to quell riots and opposition protests before and after the vote. Chadema has claimed that more than 1,000 people were killed and that security forces were trying to hide the scale of the deaths by secretly disposing of the bodies. The Catholic Church in Tanzania has said that hundreds were likely killed.
President Samia Suluhu Hassan, who automatically took office as vice president in 2021 after the death of her predecessor, took more than 97 percent of the vote, according to an official tally. She faced 16 candidates from smaller parties after Lissu and Luhaga Mpina, of the ACT-Wazalendo party, were barred from running.
Rights groups described a climate of repression ahead of voting. There were enforced disappearances, arbitrary arrests and extrajudicial killings, according to Amnesty International and others. Tanzania’s government denies the allegations.
The African Union said this week that its observers had concluded the election “did not comply with AU principles, normative frameworks, and other international obligations and standards for democratic elections.”
AU observers reported ballot stuffing at several polling stations and cases where voters were issued multiple ballots. The environment surrounding the election was “not conducive to peaceful conduct and acceptance of electoral outcomes,” the statement said.
Single-party rule has been the norm in Tanzania since the advent of multi-party politics in 1992.
But government critics point out that previous leaders tolerated opposition while maintaining a firm grip on power, whereas Hassan is accused of leading with an authoritarian style that defies youth-led democracy movements elsewhere in the region.
A version of the governing Chama cha Mapinduzi party, which maintains ties with the Communist Party of China, has ruled Tanzania since its independence from Britain in 1961, a streak that Hassan extended with her victory.