|
 | US Marines land in a CH53 helicopter during their first drop off of the day that continued rescue and reconstruction efforts in the devastated landslide area, early Monday, Feb. 20, 2006, in Guinsaugon village in Leyte, southeast of Manila, Philippines. A total of 72 bodies have been recovered so far, but officials are estimating those who perished in Friday's landslide to be over 1,500 including over 200 school children. click to open  |  | US Marines land in a CH53 helicopter during their first drop off of the day that continued rescue and reconstruction efforts in the devastated landslide area, early Monday, Feb. 20, 2006, in Guinsaugon village in Leyte, southeast of Manila, Philippines. A total of 72 bodies have been recovered so far, but officials are estimating those who perished in Friday's landslide to be over 1,500 including over 200 school children. click to open  |  | Rescuers carry a dead body of a landslide victim during their search and rescue operation in the village of Guinsaugon in the southern part of Leyte island. The US military said it was committing up to 3,000 troops to help after a huge landslide in the Philippines, as the hunt for survivors became a grim search for bodies instead click to open  |  | Graphic showing latest information about the village of Guinsaugon in the central Philippines. Rescuers are picking through a sea of mud in search of survivors after a massive landslide buried 1,400 Philippine villagers, but officials conceded hope was all but lost click to open  |  | Anthony Enso, 23, hugs his son Anthony Enso Jr. at a hospital near Saint Bernard town in central Philippines February 19, 2006, after his one-year-old son was rescued from mudslides which buried the village of Guinsaugon, near Saint Bernard town on Friday. Around 900 villagers are still missing, including Enso's wife. click to open  |
|