An earthquake of magnitude 6.3 struck the Philippines' main island on Thursday, authorities said, halting some railway operations in the capital Manila.
No casualties or major damage were reported after the quake, which struck out at sea at a depth of 10 kilometres and was felt in nearby provinces, the Philippine seismology agency said.
Operations of the three elevated railway lines in Manila were stopped due to the earthquake, the transport ministry said.
"Railways and airports had suspension in operations. So far, no report of major effect of the quake and we hope it remains this way," Civil Defence spokesperson told GMA news channel.
Ceiling lights were seen shaking at a hotel in one of Manila's business districts where President Ferdinand Marcos Jr was speaking to reporters after attending an international trade forum, according to a Reuters witness.
Peter Oliver Palacio, mayor of Calatagan, a town just 5km from the epicentre, told DZMM radio the quake was dizzying and added the town's engineering department had been instructed to check for damage.
The seismology agency initially recorded a magnitude 6.2 earthquake, but later revised it to 6.3. It said it expects damage and aftershocks.


Trump postpones military strikes on Iranian power plants
Pilot, co-pilot killed after passenger jet hits fire truck at LaGuardia airport
Kuwait launches probe into espionage, state security cases
Trump, Iran threaten to escalate conflict with attacks on energy and water facilities
Fuel reservoir in Russia's Primorsk port on fire after drone attack, governor says
Ambulances from Jewish community organisation torched, UK police say
Israeli airstrikes kill four in Gaza, Palestinian officials say
Iran says Hormuz open to all but ‘enemy-linked’ ships
