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The quake snapped some power lines in Tandag city in Surigao del Sur province on the east coast of Mindanao. More than 6,000 city residents who headed for the provincial capitol grounds on a hill were back home Saturday, disaster officials said. The quake set off car alarms, shook items off shelves and sent many coastal residents fleeing before the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center lifted all tsunami alerts it had issued for the Philippines and other countries from Indonesia to Japan, and for Pacific islands as far away as the Northern Marianas. "It was very strong. My house was making sounds," Bem Noel, a member of the Philippine House of Representatives, said in a telephone interview from Tacloban city, located on the east coast of Leyte island near Samar. "You talk to God with an earthquake that strong," he said. The Philippine archipelago is located on the Pacific "Ring of Fire," where earthquakes and volcanic activity are common. A magnitude-7.7 quake killed nearly 2,000 people on northern Luzon Island in 1990.
[Associated
Press;
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