Pinoy climber rescued from Malaysian mountain after strong quake

Malaysian authorities have rescued a Filipino climber on Mount Kinabalu in Sabah after a magnitude-6.0 earthquake left him and 129 others trapped on the Malaysian mountain, GMA's "Balitanghali reported on Saturday.

Malaysian authorities identified the climber as Michael William in a report to the Philippine embassy.

Foreign and local tourists were stuck on the 4,095-meter (13,435 feet) Mount Kinabalu when the magnitude six quake struck Friday morning some 54 km (33 miles) away from the capital of Kota Kinabalu.

Sabah Fire and Rescue department public relations officer Mohd Affendy Ramin said on Friday that 52 climbers have made it down safely since the incident.

A landslide caused rescue efforts for the remaining climbers to slow down. Those still trapped include Malaysians, Singaporeans, Americans, Dutch, British, French, and Australians.

Tourists from Belgium, Thailand, the Philippines, Kazakhstan, India, New Zealand, South Korea, Denmark, and China were also on the mountian at the time of the quake.

Citing Malaysian officials, an  Agence France-Presse report said 11 people have been reported dead and eight others remain missing.  Rie Takumi/LBG, GMA News

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