At least 9 dead, over 1,000 hurt in most powerful Taiwan quake in 25 years

2024-04-04 03:20
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TAIPEI – At least nine people were killed and more than 1,000 injured yesterday by a powerful earthquake in China’s Taiwan region that damaged dozens of buildings and prompted tsunami warnings that extended to Japan and the Philippines before being lifted.

Dozens of people were believed safe but unreachable in areas cut off by massive landslides triggered by the quake – many in tunnels that cut through the mountains that bisect the island from north to south.

Officials said the quake was the strongest to shake the island in decades, and warned of more tremors in the days ahead.

Strict building regulations and widespread public disaster awareness appear to have staved off a major catastrophe for the earthquake-prone island, which lies near the junction of two tectonic plates.

“We were very lucky,” said a woman surnamed Chang, who lived next door to a printing press warehouse near the capital that virtually pancaked in the quake, but all 50 inside at the time were plucked to safety.

“Many of the decorations at home fell on the floor, but people were safe.”

Wu Chien-fu, director of Taipei’s Central Weather Administration’s Seismology Centre, said the quake was the strongest since one of 7.6-magnitude struck in September 1999, killing around 2,400 people in the deadliest natural disaster in the island’s history.

Yesterday’s magnitude-7.4 quake hit just before 8 a.m. [local time] with the United States Geological Survey (USGS) putting the epicentre 18 kilometres south of Hualien city, at a depth of 34.8 kilometres.

Three people among a group of seven on an early-morning hike through the hills that surround the city were crushed to death by boulders loosened by the earthquake, officials said.

Separately, three died while driving when their vehicles were hit by tumbling rocks, while another died at a mine quarry.

The island’s fire department said all the fatalities had been in Hualien county, adding that 1,011 people across Taiwan had sustained injuries without specifying how seriously.

Social media was awash with shared video and images from around the island of buildings swaying as the quake struck.

“It was shaking violently, the paintings on the wall, my TV and liquor cabinet fell,” one man in Hualien told broadcaster SET TV.

Dramatic images were shown on local TV of multi-storey structures in Hualien and elsewhere tilting after the quake ended, while a printing warehouse in New Taipei City crumbled.

The mayor there said more than 50 survivors had been successfully plucked from the ruins of the structure.

Local TV channels showed bulldozers clearing rocks along the main route to Hualien, a mountain-ringed coastal county of around 300,000 inhabitants that has been cut off by landslides.

The major roads leading to Hualien’s main city pass through an extensive series of strongly built tunnels – some of them kilometres long – and officials said dozens of people could be trapped in vehicles inside.

Dozens of miners were also out of reach at a quarry in Hualien.

“We must carefully check how many people are trapped and we must rescue them quickly,” the island’s incoming leader Lai Ching-te told reporters in Hualien.

By nightfall, the county was still experiencing rolling aftershocks as rescuers continued combing through debris.

In the island’s capital, the famed Taipei 101 commercial building lit up to memorialise the victims of the quake.


Regional impact

In Taiwan, Japan and the Philippines, authorities initially issued tsunami warnings but by around 10:00 a.m., the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said the threat had “largely passed”.

In Taipei, the metro briefly stopped running but resumed within an hour, while residents received warnings from their local district chiefs to check for any gas leaks.

Across the Taiwan Strait, social media users in Fujian province and elsewhere said they also felt strong tremors.

Residents of Hong Kong and Macau also reported feeling the earthquake.

The central government in Beijing said that it was “paying close attention” to the quake and “willing to provide disaster relief assistance”, Xinhua reported.

Fabrication at Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company – the world’s biggest chip maker – was briefly interrupted at some plants, a company official said, while work at construction sites for new plants was halted for the day.

The company later said in a statement that a “small number of tools were damaged at certain facilities, partially impacting their operations” but that no “critical tools” had been damaged.

It said it was deploying “all available resources for full recovery, and impacted facilities are expected to resume production throughout the night”.  – AFP, MPD


Emergency personnel stand in front of a partially collapsed building leaning over a street in Hualien last night, after a major earthquake hit Taiwan’s east. – AFP


This photo taken yesterday shows a landslide caused by yesterday’s deadly earthquake at the entrance of a tunnel in Hualien, on the east coast of China’s Taiwan region. – Xinhua


This photo taken by Taiwan’s Central News Agency (CNA) yesterday shows a damaged building in Hualien, after a major earthquake hit the island. – AFP




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