The Mercury

Miners, guests safe after Taiwan quake

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A HELICOPTER plucked to safety yesterday six people stranded in a mining area after Taiwan’s worst earthquake in 25 years, and rescue workers reached 400 people cut off in a hotel in a mountainou­s national park by air and confirmed all were safe.

Hundreds of aftershock­s struck Taiwan’s eastern region, driving scores to seek shelter outdoors, as the death toll from Wednesday’s 7.2-magnitude quake rose to 10, with the tally of injured at 1 099, authoritie­s said.

A helicopter ferried to safety six miners trapped on a cliff in a dramatic rescue after the quake cut off the roads into Hualien’s soaring mountains, in footage shown by the fire department.

The department said four foreigners remained unaccounte­d for – one Canadian, one Indian and two Australian­s.

Rescue workers located most of the roughly 50 hotel workers marooned on a highway as they headed to a resort in the Taroko Gorge national park.

They also reached the same hotel in the gorge, cut-off by the quake, by helicopter and establishe­d all 400 guests and workers there were safe.

The fire department said work would continue in the morning to re-open the road.

The discovery of a dead body on a hiking trail near the entrance to the gorge took the total deaths to 10.

The agricultur­e ministry urged people to keep away from the mountains because of the risk of falling rocks and the formation of “barrier lakes” as water pools behind unstable debris.

Yesterday was the start of a long-weekend holiday for the tomb-sweeping festival, when families traditiona­lly return home to attend to ancestral graves, though others will also visit tourist attraction­s.

People in largely rural and sparsely populated Hualien county were readying to go to work and school when the earthquake struck offshore on Wednesday.

Buildings also shuddered violently in Taipei, but the capital suffered minimal damage and disruption.

All those trapped in buildings in the worst-hit city of Hualien have been rescued, but many residents unnerved by more than 300 aftershock­s spent the night outdoors.

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