The Borneo Post

Taiwanese hot spring town still cut off after typhoon

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TAIPEI: Taiwanese authoritie­s were rushing to repair roads in the mountainou­s hot spring town of Wulai on Monday, where 1,100 people were without electricit­y or water after Typhoon Soudelor ripped through the island.

Landslides triggered by the storm, which hit in the early hours of Saturday and was billed as the most powerful typhoon this year, blocked the main road into the northern township just south of capital Taipei.

“People are now able to walk past the area after our emergency repair, but it may take another three or four days for vehicles to get through,” Chiang Chienming, a chief road engineer at the transporta­tion ministry, told AFP.

About 100 residents in Xiaoyi village who were previously unaccounte­d for were contacted Saturday night and were safe.

Soldiers were searching for another 10 people reported to be unreachabl­e, a spokesman for the New Taipei City fire bureau told AFP.

Supplies have been f lown into the area, mostly instant noodles, bread, and water. Television footage of the once scenic aboriginal town showed damaged houses, cracked roads, and mounds of rubble.

Soudelor caused at least seven deaths in Taiwan as it flooded rivers, ripped up trees, and triggered landslides. Toppled trees and signboards damaged electricit­y lines, knocking out power to a record four million households.

More than 90,000 households were still without power Monday morning, more than two days after the storm. More than 400 people were injured, according to the latest government statistics as of Saturday evening.

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