CHINA / National |
Quake kills two in Taiwan, triggers tsunami alert(Agencies)Updated: 2006-12-27 06:37
TAIPEI - A powerful earthquake struck off southwestern Taiwan on Tuesday, triggering a tsunami warning on the second anniversary of the waves that killed more than 200,000 in southern Asia. Two hours later, seismologists lifted the warning, saying the threat of destructive waves had passed.
One member of the family - an 89-year old man - escaped from the building unharmed. Initial reports said all the people in the collapsed building had been freed, but these turned out to be unfounded. They added that many streets in the city were cracked and a major bridge was
damaged. Several fires broke out in the area, apparently caused by downed
electric power cables. According to China Seismological Bureau, two earthquakes -- the first
measuring 7.2 on the Richter scale and the second measuring 6.7 -- hit the South
China Sea on Tuesday. The epicenter was located at 21.9 degrees north latitude
and 120.6 degrees east longitude, about 350 kilometers from the Chinese mainland
and 15 kilometers from Taiwan. The warning underscored the higher level of caution about tsunami waves in
the region since a massive earthquake off Indonesia exactly two years earlier
triggered a powerful tsunami in the Indian Ocean that killed 230,000 people in a
dozen countries. "The building swayed so badly that many guests panicked and ran out of their rooms and into the streets," she said. The tremor was centered at sea about 23 kilometers (13 miles) southwest of Hengchun on the southern tip of Taiwan, the bureau said. Hengchun is about 450 kilometers (260 miles) south of Taipei.Quakes frequently shake Taiwan, which is part of the Pacific's "Ring of Fire," an arc of volcanos and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin. Most are minor and cause little or no damage. However, a 7.6-magnitude earthquake in central Taiwan in September 1999 killed more than 2,300 people. |
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