Bangkok Post

Bridge joints probed after fatal cave-in

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TAIPEI: Investigat­ors yesterday were examining possible structural problems surroundin­g a bridge that collapsed in northeaste­rn Taiwan on Tuesday, killing six people.

A 2016 report on bridges in Yilan county had found problems with the expansion joints on the Nanfang’ao bridge, which was completed in 1998 and collapsed on Tuesday morning, the official Central News Agency reported. The joints are designed to absorb changes in temperatur­e.

CNA cited the report as saying that motorists could sense a difference of levels on either side of the joints, possibly as a result of warping or other problems.

The company responsibl­e for managing the bridge, Taiwan Internatio­nal Ports Corporatio­n, earlier said it cleaned the joints and fixed other problems such as rusted steel reinforcem­ents and guardrails in 2017 and 2018.

Experts are also looking into the condition of the bridge’s steel cables, including the possibilit­y of dangerous levels of corrosion.

The 140-metre-long, 18-metre-high bridge, collapsed into a bay on Taiwan’s lightly populated east coast, about 60 kilometres southeast of Taipei.

A typhoon swept by the island earlier, but the weather was sunny when the bridge collapsed, and it wasn’t clear if the storm was a factor.

Divers yesterday found the body of the sixth fatality when the bridge collapsed onto fishing boats below.

Another 10 people were injured, including the driver of an oil tanker truck that was crossing the bridge at the time of its collapse.

Taiwan’s military deployed a floating platform to help workers remove debris and extract crushed boats.

TIPC said it would provide 5 million Taiwan dollars (about 4.9 million baht) in compensati­on to the families of those killed. The victims have been identified as Wartono, 29, Ersona, 32, and Mohamad Domiri, 28, all from Indonesia — and three Philippine citizens Andree Serencio, 44, George Impang 46, and Romulo Escalicas, 29.

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