Taiwan was rocked by its strongest earthquake in 25 years during Wednesday's morning rush hour, resulting in nine fatalities, trapping miners, and prompting residents to flee through damaged buildings.
While a tsunami warning was initially raised, it was subsequently canceled.
The quake's epicenter was off the coast of rural, mountainous Hualien County, causing severe damage to buildings.
In Taipei, approximately 150 kilometers away, older buildings experienced tile loss, leading schools to evacuate students to sports fields equipped with yellow safety helmets.
Amid continuing aftershocks, some children used textbooks as shields against falling debris.
abcnew.go.com reports stated that neighbours and rescue workers were seen lifting residents, including a toddler, through windows and onto the street as doors became fused shut during the shaking.
Despite appearing mobile, they seemed shocked but luckily without serious injuries.
Although Taiwan is accustomed to frequent earthquakes and has a well-prepared population, authorities had anticipated a relatively mild quake and thus didn't issue alerts.
The eventual tremor was powerful enough to unsettle even those accustomed to such seismic activity.
Read Full Story
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
Instagram
Google+
YouTube
LinkedIn
RSS