Los Angeles Times

6.4 quake strikes Taiwan

Several buildings fall in the southern city of Tainan. Casualties remain unknown.

- By Rong- Gong Lin I I ron. lin@ latimes. com

A magnitude 6.4 earthquake struck southern Taiwan on Friday, toppling several buildings in Tainan, one of the island’s oldest cities, according to local media reports.

There were no immediate reports of deaths or serious injuries.

One of the buildings that fell was residentia­l and was 17 stories tall. Rescue crews pulled out at least 123 people, the reports said. It was unclear how many more people were still trapped inside.

The quake, which hit at 3: 57 a. m. Saturday local time, was particular­ly bad because it was very shallow — about 6 miles undergroun­d — and the epicenter was on the island, instead of offshore, said U. S. Geological Survey geophysici­st Paul Caruso. People felt the earthquake as far away as mainland China.

The quake hit a day before the eve of the Lunar New Year, a time of family celebratio­ns.

Derek Hoerler, an elementary school teacher who is from California, said he woke up and felt violent shaking.

“It was not a rolling gentle earthquake, but a violent jerking motion. The walls were shaking and you could hear the building and windows moving,” said Hoerler, who lives in New Taipei City but was visiting family in Kaohsiung when the quake hit. “It lasted at least a minute with swaying afterwards. I felt complete terror.

“Biggest earthquake I’ve felt, and I’m from California,” said Hoerler, originally from Santa Clara. “Now I just feel worried for the people in Tainan, where buildings collapsed.”

Hoerler, 37, said he was in the Sacramento area when the magnitude 6.9 Loma Prieta earthquake hit the Bay Area in 1989, and thought this temblor in Taiwan felt different.

“That was a rolling quake in ’ 89,” he said. “I remember seeing the pavement actually roll like a wave. The one in Taiwan felt like [ the earth moved] up and down, side to side — violent jerking, like someone was shaking you hard.”

The epicenter of the earthquake was under the central mountain range of Taiwan — about 27 miles southeast of Tainan and 24 miles northeast of Kaohsiung, the island’s main port city.

At least four buildings have fallen, according to the BBC. Dramatic images on social media showed a large residentia­l structure canted, as if it were about to collapse, and rescue workers in yellow helmets attempting to scale mounds of rubble.

Taiwan’s outgoing president, Ma Ying- jeou, was en route to the disaster site, according to local media.

In 1999, a magnitude 7.6 earthquake hit Taiwan’s central region. About 2,500 people died in that quake.

Taiwan sits in a collision zone between the Philippine Sea and Eurasian plates, and is seismicall­y active.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A RESCUE WORKER leads a survivor from a toppled building in Tainan, Taiwan. The quake hit before dawn local time. “It was not a rolling gentle earthquake, but a violent jerking motion,” said a man in Kaohsiung.
Associated Press A RESCUE WORKER leads a survivor from a toppled building in Tainan, Taiwan. The quake hit before dawn local time. “It was not a rolling gentle earthquake, but a violent jerking motion,” said a man in Kaohsiung.

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