Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Teams searching for family feared trapped

- By Johnson Lai and Christophe­r Bodeen

HUALIEN, TAIWAN >> Rescue teams are searching for a family of five feared trapped in a rockslide following Taiwan's biggest earthquake in 25 years, which has left at least 12 dead.

Two bodies have been found in the Taroko National Park, a tourist attraction famous for its rugged, mountainou­s terrain in Hualien County about 90 miles from Taipei. At least four other victims were found in the park. Authoritie­s have yet to verify the identities of the latest victims.

The family, surnamed You, had gone on a hike after visiting ancestral sites for the traditiona­l gravesweep­ing observance­s.

Wednesday's 7.4-magnitude quake sent boulders and mud tumbling down mountainsi­des, blocking roads and smashing cars, and injured more than 1,000 people.

In the county seat of Hualien, crews were working to demolish the fivestory Tien Wang Hsing building, which was left leaning at a severe angle, one of scores of buildings damaged around the island. Residents wearing motorcycle and constructi­on helmets recovered legal documents and other documents before large cementpene­trating drills and backhoes began bringing down the building.

A high school teacher was killed in the building when she returned to her apartment to find her cat just as an aftershock struck.

Others were still stuck in areas cut off by road blockages, including one Canadian and two persons with joint Australian and Singapore citizenshi­p, according to emergency services. Authoritie­s were using cell phone signals to ascertain their positions.

Hualien will face a major challenge to rebuild and bring back tourism, said county head Hsu Chen-Wei.

“After such a strong quake, rebuilding and reconstruc­tion will be an extremely heavy burden,” Hsu told reporters.

The small number of casualties and rapid response has been attributed to tightened constructi­on safety standards and the replacemen­t of older buildings with modern structures built to resist earthquake­s. Emergency services have upgraded their equipment and training, assisted by civic groups such as the Red Cross and the Buddhist Tzu Chi charitable foundation.

 ?? CHIANG YING-YING THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Workers begin demolition of collapsed building two days after a powerful earthquake struck, in Hualien City, Taiwan, on Friday.
CHIANG YING-YING THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers begin demolition of collapsed building two days after a powerful earthquake struck, in Hualien City, Taiwan, on Friday.

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