"Sad
Day! I have just announced the recovery of 9 (additional) bodies by
rescue teams," Malaysia's tourism minister Masidi Manjun said on
Twitter. "Trying to get helis to bring them down. Fatalities to date:
11."
Mountain guides have helped 167
climbers to safety after the quake stranded them atop Kinabalu, one of
Southeast Asia's tallest peaks, according to the official Twitter
account of the Malaysia Fire and Rescue Department.
Two
of those confirmed dead were Rubbi Sappingi, a 30-year-old mountain
guide attached to Amazing Borneo Tours, and Rachael Ho Yann Shiuan, 12, a
Singaporean student.
Eight people
remain unaccounted for, added Manjun, saying that the nine new bodies
recovered Saturday had not yet been identified.
Many
of the missing were students and teachers from a Singaporean primary
school, Singapore's Minister of Education Heng Swee Keat announced
Saturday.
Singapore's government was arranging a special flight to the disaster zone to fly parents from the school to Sabah, said Heng.
"We will do all we can to find the missing students and teachers in Mount Kinabalu," he wrote on Facebook.
The magnitude-6.0 quake struck early Friday, damaging several buildings in Ranau -- the epicenter, the Bernama news agency said.
Videos
and social media photos taken from the base of the mountain appeared
to show large rock slides enveloping the peak after the tremor and
people anxiously looking for shelter.
Helicopters had difficulty
reaching the climbers on the mountain peak due to bad weather, said
Jamili Nais, Sabah Parks director.
Damage to the hospital in Ranau also hampered rescue efforts, he said.
Nurul
Hani Ideris, 29, was on the mountain peak with a group of climbers and
tour guides when the quake struck, blocking off trails and stranding
them. "All the paths vanished," she told CNN.
Shivering
in near-freezing temperatures, they waited all day for a helicopter
rescue that never came. But then a team of 75 more guides from the park
arrived to help them escape, she said.
They
managed to reach safety after a grueling 10-hour hike through debris
that lasted into the middle of the night, sharing what little food and
water they had and passing by what appeared to be dead bodies.
A helicopter spotted them and threw two boxes of supplies, but the boxes fell off a gorge.
"We were exhausted, starving at the same time ... it was very difficult," she said.
Still,
the mountain guides "seemed to know every single part of the place,"
and managed to carve a route through the devastated landscape, cutting
branches and tying ropes to create a new path.
It was nearly 2 a .m. when they reached Kundasang, a town near the mountain's southern base.
Only as they neared the base did they see the fire brigade and later the army.
Ideris said climbers were "very disappointed" with the government.
"No one came to save us," she said. If it hadn't been for the mountain guides, "We would be freezing to death."
Lynn Siang, a tour agency spokeswoman, called the mountain guides "heroes."
"The
main rescue work was done by the mountain guides," she told CNN. "On
the path that was blocked by fallen rocks, the mountain guides had to
tie a rope. When climbers crossed the ropes, they had to step on the
shoulders of the guides -- the guides used their body as a cushion.
"They really have sacrificed a lot. Rubbi -- he sacrificed a lot."
Siang added no one should be blamed in the disaster's wake.
Calls to Malaysia's tourism ministry and rescue department were not immediately answered Saturday morning.
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