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As of Friday, September 08, 2006 20:18:54 -0400 this is what we have on this specific dream drawing prediction.  If your able to help provide proof or information on this specific drawing, please click here to send me an email.  Please include the exact date of the dream or the DD number.  And again, thank you for your time, its very much appreciated.




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A mudslide will kill 1962 people in February of 2006, it will happen in the Phillines after 32 inches of rain fall, a school will be destroyed, also says "warn the town"

UPDATE THIS HAS HAPPENED!!


2.19.2006

Brian, right again.

reply

Hi, yes, sadly...your story has been posted.

 


2.19.2006

Hundreds feared dead in Philippine mudslide
17/02/2006 23:56


By Dolly Aglay

MANILA (Reuters) - Hundreds of people were feared dead in the central Philippines after mudslides triggered by heavy rains buried houses and an elementary school packed with children on Friday, officials and witnesses said.

Footage from local television showed only coconut trees and a few tin roofs sticking out of the reddish soil after part of a mountainside collapsed on the farming village of Guinsaugon in Southern Leyte province.

"Rescuers are scared because they can still hear the mountain rumbling," said Maria Lim, the mayor of Saint Bernard town, where a minor earthquake was felt on Friday morning.

Rain, chest-deep mud, blocked roads, washed-out bridges and lack of heavy equipment were hindering rescue efforts. Relief flights and digging were suspended for the night.

"The troops pulled out because big boulders are cascading down the mountain," said Colonel Raul Farnacio, in charge of the military’s relief operations.

He said 15 bodies had been recovered and 36 survivors found in Guinsaugon, a community of about 1,860 people.

"Help is on the way," President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo said on television, adding navy and coast guard ships were rushing to the remote coastal area.

Rosette Lerias, governor of Southern Leyte, said the local school was full of children and also women who were celebrating the anniversary of a local women’s group.

"I don’t see any homes, I don’t see any buildings. It’s just mud," she told CNN. "Oh God, this is truly tragic."

One survivor, Didita Kamarenta, feared for her children.

"I felt the earth shake and a strong gust of wind, then I felt mud at my feet," she said. "All the children, including my two children, are lost. They might have been buried."

In Geneva, the International Federation of the Red Cross said it feared the death toll would be high.

"A relief plane is flying from the capital of Manila carrying 1,000 body bags, emergency trauma kits to help 1,000 people, rubber boots, ropes, clothing, flashlights and medicine," it said, adding it released about $150,000 (86,000 pounds) in initial assistance.

In New York, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said the United Nations was sending a disaster assessment team to the Philippines to help local officials determine emergency needs.

The office was providing a $50,000 emergency grant to help coordinate the international response, it said.

The United States sent two navy vessels, already in the Philippines, to the area, White House spokesman Trent Duffy told reporters.

"The United States expresses our sincere condolences to the people of the Philippines for the loss of life and the suffering of other victims, family members and loved ones," he said.

VILLAGERS WERE WARNED

The Philippines is lashed by about 20 typhoons each year, including a series of storms in late 2004 that left about 1,800 people dead or missing in provinces northeast of the capital.

Sixteen peopleA were killed earlier this week when heavy rains and flash floods hit southeastern provinces.

Leyte island was the scene of one of the country’s worst disasters in 1991 when more than 5,000 people died in floods triggered by a typhoon.

Congressman Roger Mercado said residents had been advised to leave the village after weeks of heavy rain but he laid some of the blame on mining and logging in the area three decades ago.

"They would not evacuate," he said. "This is the effect of the logging before. Every time it rains there are flashfloods."

Earthquake experts said the small tremor on Friday did not appear strong enough to have triggered a landslide on its own.

"The area could have really been ready for a landslide because of the rain," said Rene Solidum, director of the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology.

Farmers and government agencies have been told to prepare for a stormy La Nina weather pattern that might hit the country. The weather bureau said typhoons, floods and rains since November might be linked to development of La Nina.

(With reporting by Carmel Crimmins and Rosemarie Francisco)