The death toll from a catastrophic landfill collapse in the central Philippines has climbed to four, officials confirmed Saturday, as a desperate, round-the-clock rescue operation continues to hunt for signs of life under a mountain of garbage and debris, with dozens of workers still unaccounted for and families clinging to fading hope.
The Binaliw landfill in Cebu City collapsed without warning on Thursday, burying structures and facilities with an estimated 110 workers on site at the time. Cebu City Mayor Nestor Archival announced the rising toll on Facebook, confirming four dead and 12 hospitalized, as emergency crews worked frantically in a perilous race against time.

“Signs of Life” Detected Amidst the Rubble
The grim search has been punctuated by fragile moments of hope. Mayor Archival stated that authorities “detected signs of life in specific areas,” prompting a delicate, high-stakes excavation effort. The operation has now escalated with the deployment of a massive 50-ton crane to carefully move heavy wreckage while rescuers listen for any sound or movement from below.
Based on a tally from Friday, 36 people remained officially missing, though an updated number was not immediately available. The chaotic scene and the scale of the collapse have made accounting for every individual an agonizingly slow process.
Families in Agonizing Limbo, Hoping for a Miracle
At the perimeter of the disaster zone, families of the missing endure an unbearable wait. Jerahmey Espinoza, whose husband was among those lost in the collapse, went to the landfill clutching onto hope. “They haven’t seen him or located him ever since the disaster happened. We’re still hopeful that he’s alive,” Espinoza said, a sentiment echoed by scores of others watching heavy machinery claw at the trash heap that may have become a mass grave.
















