Taiwan earthquake: death toll rises to 24, 121 still missing

0 Comment(s)Print E-mail Xinhua/China Daily, February 7, 2016
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Rescuers still hear calls for help from inside collapsed building

A 6.7-magnitude earthquake hit Kaohsiung of Taiwan at a depth of 15 kilometers at 03:57 am Beijing Time on Saturday, Feb. 6, 2016. [Photo/qq.com]


Firefighters and soldiers used ladders, excavators and other equipment to pull survivors out of rubble and through twisted windows.

Volunteers from the area are helping locals register unreachable relatives.

Rescuers on site said they could still hear calls for help from inside the collapsed building, but have to consolidate the collapsed building parts first before saving the rest.

Earthquakes frequently hit Taiwan. Most of them are minor, but a 7.3-magnitude quake, the strongest to hit Taiwan in about 100 years, shook the island on Sept. 21, 1999, leaving more than 2,000 people dead.

What survivors say

"It was horrible! No way to celebrate our new year," a resident of the Wei Guan building surnamed Pan said.

A lady surnamed Cheng said her brother, sister-in-law and their two daughters were still trapped.

"Their mobile phones are disconnected," she said. "Their landline rings but no one answers."

"I was watching TV and after a sudden burst of shaking, I heard a boom. I opened my metal door and saw the building opposite fall down," said a 71-year-old neighbour who gave his name as Chang.

A plumber, he said he fetched some tools and a ladder and prised some window bars open to rescue a woman crying for help.

"She asked me to go back and rescue her husband, child, but I was afraid of a gas explosion so I didn't go in. At the time there were more people calling for help, but my ladder wasn't long enough so there was no way to save them."

One elderly woman, wrapped in blankets, was strapped to a board and slowly slid down a ramp to the ground as the cries of those still trapped rang out. Rescuers used dogs and acoustic equipment to pick up signs of life in the rubble.

"There are 60 households in that building," said Tainan fire department information officer Lee Po Min, estimating that there might be about 240 people living there.

One city hospital said 58 people had been brought in, most of them with light injuries. The fire department said a total of 115 people had been taken to hospital from around Tainan.

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