JUNE 10, 1991. Angeles City awakened to its worst nightmare: the American dream was over.
Dashed was the hope – against
hope – that GI Joe would stay, come what may. A belief borne by the new
concrete wall around the base perimeter that had just been completed, the
frenzied base housing construction seen as a sure sign of increased troop
deployment, and the second runway built reportedly to serve as alternative
landing site for the space shuttle Columbia. All coming to naught.
Before stunned eyes passed the
very end of the city’s economic being: By car, bus, truck, American servicemen
and their dependents started their exodus from Clark – jamming the North Luzon
Expressway in a three-mile-long convoy – to Subic where US warships and troop
transports awaited them for the long journey home.
Their departure from Clark was
for the Americans a less than stoic acceptance of the impending repudiation by
the Philippine Senate of the bases treaty – to ultimately come in September –
than a hurried, harried flight from certain catastrophe.
June 11. “16,000 evacuated from Clark” bannered the Stars and
Stripes, with the subhead: “Major eruption feared from Mount Pinatubo
volcano.”
The rumblings of the hitherto
hardly known volcano starting to get frequenter and stronger by the hour.
June 12. Philippine Independence Day. For the first time in 90 years,
Angeles City was thoroughly free of a foreign occupation force. The meaning of
the day though was utterly lost to Mayor Antonio Abad Santos whose speech
before the city hall alternated between carping – “overacting,” he called the
American abandonment of the base, and comforting – that the greater number of
Angelenos need not panic, being outside Pinatubo’s immediate 10-kilometer
radius that was initially tagged as danger zone.
Thunderous explosions cut Abad
Santos in mid-speech, a giant plume of ash shot up 20 kilometers into the sky,
immediately followed a rain of hot ash and pumice stones. It was 8:51 in the
morning.
Panic – people froze in their
track, eyes in the sky and mouth agape, shocked and awed by nature’s might.
Then pandemonium – the rush for
home, hither and thither like headless chickens, amid the cacophony of frightened
shrieks, nervous prayers, screeching tires, and blaring horns.
With the acrid smell of sulphur
wafting in the ash-laden air, masks – surgical and industrial – ran out in the
city’s drug and hardware stores. The surplus biochemical masks from Desert Storm
which found their way to the PX stalls of Dau and Nepo Mart had been snagged,
wholesale, by some very enterprising profiteer much earlier.
Braving the cloud of ash,
President Cory Aquino flew by helicopter to Clark to see the situation first
hand, and dropped by the Angeles City High School where the eruption’s very
first evacuees of 2,000, mostly Aeta tribesmen, have taken refuge.
“This could only be the
beginning.” So warned Dr. Raymundo S. Punongbayan, director of the Philippine
Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) of the June 12 eruptions.
June 13. Phivolcs recorded more eruptions, the volcano gushing greater
clouds of ash and gases 25 kilometers into the sky. “Phenomenal eruptions,”
Punongbayan called them, and declared: “This is already the Big Bang. I can’t
see any other eruption that will exceed this.”
June 14. Dark clouds blanketed the city, ominously dimming the garish
neon lights of Balibago.
June 15. A much Bigger Bang that proved Punongbayan’s declaration deadly
wrong.
The Great Eruption that turned
bright day – starting at 8:15 in the morning – to darkest night. The roll of
thunder, the flash of lightning, the rain of ash and stones, and the tremors of
the ground foreboding the very end of days.
The city’s secondary economic
lifeline – next only to Clark Air Base – furniture and handicraft manufacturing
totally collapsed, literally, from the weight of ashfall: Factories – roofs,
beams, posts, and walls – crashing down on machines, equipment, supplies and
finished products.
Collapsed too, as many houses in
the city, was the roof of the Philippine Rabbit Bus terminal downtown, killing
two waiting passengers and injuring scores of others. Later in the day, the
city’s very icon of the finest Chinese cuisine – Shanghai De Luxe Restaurant –
burned to the ground after its roof collapsed on the liquefied petroleum gas
tanks in its kitchen.
By 2 in the afternoon, steaming
mudflows – soon to enter the lexicon as the terrifying “lahar” – sprang from
the foot of Pinatubo, rampaged through the Abacan River, destroying, in
succession, Friendship Bridge that led to Clark, Hensonville Spillway, Abacan
Bridge, where MacArthur Highway traversed, and Pandan Bridge that led to
Magalang town. Scouring the riverbank and gobbling up houses and buildings,
including the remnants of the collapsed Angeles City General Hospital.
West of the city, the
lahar-swollen Mancatian River swallowed its eponymous bridge cutting off
Angeles City from Porac town. Mudflows overtopped the Sapang Balen
Creek and spread steadily across the city proper. The public market and
commercial area of San Nicolas and the business district, indeed the very heart
of the city, Sto. Rosario where city hall, the “big church,” the enclaves of
the rich, as well as the city’s and Central Luzon’s biggest private school,
Holy Angel College were all sited, all inundated by steaming mud.
On Doomsday itself, no flooding
was recorded in San Fernando.
With supplications to the
Almighty drowned by the rumble of the volcano, with the onslaught of mudflows
and the rain of ash unabating, it was hegira for the Angelenos.
All the roads leading south of
the city were filled with dazed and dazzled refugees, on foot, in cars, on
buses, on truck: seeking relative safety in the homes of relatives and friends,
finding temporary shelters in evacuation centers, the first of which was
Amoranto Stadium in Quezon City provided for by Mayor Brigido Simon, Jr., a
Kapampangan himself, who also brought buses to the very ramp of the Angeles
exit of the North Luzon Expressway to ferry more evacuees.
Buried in ashes, reduced to a
virtual ghost town, Angeles City and its twin base town, which also bore the
initial brunt of the eruptions, made easy picking for the moralists’ sermon of
the wrath of God heaped upon Sodom and Gomorrah. The host cities to the US
military bases long known as deeply mired in decadence and debauchery.
But erased from the face of
earth like the biblical sin cities, Angeles City refused to be. (From the book Agyu
Tamu: Turning Tragedy into Triumph (2011) edited by Bong Z. Lacson)
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