Earthquake-hit Taiwan city still on edge as rescuers hunt survivors

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Rescuers from Japan join the searching operation at an apartment building collapsed after a strong earthquake in Hualien County, eastern Taiwan.-AP
Rescuers from Japan join the searching operation at an apartment building collapsed after a strong earthquake in Hualien County, eastern Taiwan.-AP

Hualien (Taiwan) - Four buildings collapsed, officials said, and seven people were still missing.

By Reuters

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Published: Thu 8 Feb 2018, 9:00 PM

Last updated: Thu 8 Feb 2018, 11:41 PM

Scores of aftershocks hampered rescue efforts on Thursday as emergency personnel combed through collapsed buildings in search of survivors after a powerful earthquake killed at least 10 people near Taiwan's tourist city of Hualien.
The coastal city was hit on Tuesday by a magnitude 6.4 quake just before midnight (1600 GMT) that injured 270 people. Four buildings collapsed, officials said, and seven people were still missing.
Rescuers stepped up efforts at one of the worst-hit structures, a 12-storey building that housed apartments and a small hotel, where authorities believe most of those still missing to have been, including several foreigners.
Thick steel girders propped up the heavily leaning structure to keep it from collapsing further, with the lower floors having already caved in. "Everyone was surprised," said Huang Chang Po, the owner of a unit in the building, built in 1994. "We have strong earthquakes all the time in Hualien and it's really bizarre that our building collapsed," he said.
Up to 100 soldiers, rescuers, police, aid workers and volunteers scrambled in the cold and rain outside to find survivors, as excavators cleared away debris.
At an emergency meeting on Thursday, other residents and owners raised concerns about possible recent modifications and demanded a structural check by engineers to determine the cause of the collapse.
Death toll rises to 10
1-Death toll at 10 with seven still missing
2-Owners of worst-hit building demand investigation
3-Quake-hit city still on edge with more than 200 aftershocks
 
 
 
 


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