Screen capture of supposed Facebook posts have gone viral, angering  Filipinos and fueling their drive to help victims of tropical storm  "Sendong" (international name Washi).
  
The posts were supposedly written by a certain Celine Acut, a  Filipino living in France, and a certain Van Carumba, a Cebu native  living in the United Arab Emirates.
“According to the news, almost all of the victims are poor  families, so its better that they all die this early…whats the point of  living a life which is full of hunger, at least they are now resting  with peace..they are worthless, they are unproductive and their lives  has no value at al.. they are just making more problems to the society  so as i said its better that they have died this early.. they don’t  desserve a chance to live because they are poor, they are not VIP  anyways,” Acut’s first post said.
“I even wish sendong to come back and flash away those remaining poor families over there,” said her second post.
Van Carumba, meanwhile, posted on December 19, “Buti nangyari yan sa  CDO (Cagayan de Oro)…Di pa namamatay lahat ng tao jan.” One person  commented on her post, saying “Wag ka naman ganyan, di lahat ng  taga-Cagayan de Oro may kasalanan sayo.”
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 | An screen capture of a post written by Van Carumba on Facebook. It has been shared almost 600 times as of press time. | 
 
Acut’s Facebook profile has since been deleted, but the page was  cached by Google on December 20. Screen captures of her profile posted  online show that she studied at Mindanao State University-Iligan; lives  in Le Petit-Paris, France and is engaged.
Carumba’s Facebook page is still active, but all her wall posts have  been hidden aside from the controversial one she posted on Monday.
Acut and Carumba are now the subject of angry posts on social  networking sites such as Twitter and Tumblr, and the screen captures of  their posts have been posted on several blogs as of press time. Pages  have even been created on Facebook specifically to bash them. 
One page on Acut had 1,544 likes, while the other had only 138. A page dedicated to Van Carumba had 451 likes as of press time.
Neither Acut nor Carumba could be reached for comment.
It is not certain if Acut is a real person or a figure created by  people seeking to involve others in efforts to help the victims of  tropical storm Sendong.
According to Camama Marwah from the Registrar’s Office of the Mindanao  State University-Iligan Institute of Technology, they have no records of  a Celine Acut graduating from their school.
Online searches of her name yielded only social networking site links  to the screen captures of her posts, and a search in French phone  directories such as Pages Blanches and 118218.fr also came up negative.
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 | Celine Acut's Facebook page, cached December 20, 2011. The account has been deleted. |