A strong earthquake has set off landslides and damaged buildings in the northern Philippines, killing at least five people and injuring dozens.
In the capital Manila, hospital patients were evacuated and terrified people rushed outdoors.
The 7-magnitude quake was centred in a mountainous area of Abra province, said Renato Solidum, the head of the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, who described the mid-morning shaking as a major earthquake.
“The ground shook like I was on a swing and the lights suddenly went out. We rushed out of the office, and I heard screams and some of my companions were in tears,” said Michael Brillantes, a safety officer in the Abra town of Lagangilang, near the epicentre.
Cutting off family members: ‘It had never occurred to me that you could grieve somebody who was still alive’
The bird-shaped obsession that drives James Crombie, one of Ireland’s best sports photographers
The Dublin riots, one year on: ‘I know what happened doesn’t represent Irish people’
The week in US politics: Gaetz fiasco shows Trump he won’t get everything his way
“It was the most powerful quake I’ve felt and I thought the ground would open up,” Mr Brillantes told the Associated Press by mobile phone.
At least five people died — mostly in collapsed structures.
One villager died when he was hit by falling cement slabs in his house in Abra, where dozens of others were injured.
In Benguet province, a worker died after a small building that was under construction collapsed in the strawberry-growing mountain town of La Trinidad.
Hundreds of houses and buildings had cracked walls, including some that collapsed in Abra, where president Ferdinand Marcos jnr, who took office less than a month ago, planned to travel on Thursday to meet victims and local officials.
Mr Marcos jnr told a news conference he was in his office at the riverside Malacanang presidential palace complex when the chandeliers began swaying and making clanking sounds.
“It was very strong,” he said of the ground shaking.
In a chilling near-death experience, Filipino photojournalist Harley Palangchao and companions were travelling downhill in two vans in Mountain Province when they suddenly heard thunder-like thuds and saw an avalanche of boulders as big as cars raining down just ahead of them from a towering mountain.
Amid screams of his companions in their van to “back up, back up!”, the 44-year-old father of three raised his camera in the front seat and snapped what he feared could be the final pictures of his life.
The van in front of them was grazed by a boulder, injuring one, but he and others in the second van drove backwards fast enough and escaped unscathed.
“I was thinking there should be at least a record if something happened to us,” Mr Palangchao told the AP.
“It was a horrific experience.”
The Red Cross issued a picture of a three-storey building precariously leaning towards a debris-covered road in Abra.
A video taken by a panicking witness showed parts of an old stone church tower peeling off and falling in a cloud of dust on a hilltop.
Patients, some in wheelchairs, and medical personnel were evacuated from at least two hospitals in Manila, about 300km (200 miles) south of Lagangilang, but were later told to return after engineers found only a few minor cracks on walls.
The quake’s strength was lowered from the initial 7.3 magnitude after further analysis.
The quake was set off by movement in a local fault at a depth of 17km (10 miles), the institute said, adding it expected damage and more aftershocks.
The Philippines lies along the Pacific Ring of Fire, an arc of faults around the Pacific Ocean where most of the world’s earthquakes occur.
It is also lashed by about 20 typhoons and tropical storms each year, making it one of the world’s most disaster-prone countries.
A magnitude 7.7 quake killed nearly 2,000 people in the northern Philippines in 1990. — AP