Bangkok Post

At least 9 dead, hundreds injured in powerful quake

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TAIPEI: At least nine people were killed and more than 800 injured yesterday by a powerful earthquake in Taiwan that damaged dozens of buildings and prompted tsunami warnings that extended to Japan and the Philippine­s before being lifted.

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

“The earthquake is close to land and it’s shallow. It’s felt all over Taiwan and offshore islands,” said Wu Chien-fu, director of Taipei’s Central Weather Administra­tion’s Seismology Centre.

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.

Mr Wu said the quake was the strongest since a 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 8am local time (7am Thai time), with the United States Geological Survey putting the epicentre 18 kilometres south of Taiwan’s Hualien City, at a depth of 34.8km.

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, a truck driver died when his vehicle was hit by a landslide as it approached a tunnel in the area.

The National Fire Agency said all the deaths occurred in Hualien county, and that so far 882 people had been injured in the quake, without specifying how seriously. Social media was awash with shared video and images from around the country of buildings swaying as the quake struck.

Dramatic images were shown on local TV of multi-storey structures in

Hualien and elsewhere tilting after the quake ended, while a warehouse in New Taipei City crumbled.

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

Local TV channels showed bulldozers clearing rocks along roads to Hualien, a mountain-ringed coastal city of around 100,000 people that has been cut off by landslides.

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

President Tsai Ing-wen said the military would be providing support.

 ?? AFP ?? Taiwan’s president-elect and current Vice-President Lai Ching-te, third right, surveys damage in Hualien following yesterday’s quake.
AFP Taiwan’s president-elect and current Vice-President Lai Ching-te, third right, surveys damage in Hualien following yesterday’s quake.

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