Taiwan Hit By Worst Earthquake in Nearly 25 Years

Rescue operations to reach 77 people trapped in the Jinwen and Qingshui tunnels along the road in Hualien continued into the early hours of Thursday morning.

Friday 05 April 2024 | 03:28

Parts of the  road leading to the Qingshui Tunnel has collapsed. Source: Taiwan Train Communications Networks Traffic Centre/ Google

Parts of the road leading to the Qingshui Tunnel has collapsed. Source: Taiwan Train Communications Networks Traffic Centre/ Google

The people of Taiwan have woken up to the aftermath of its worst earthquake in a quarter of a century.

Rescue efforts continued on Thursday after a 7.4 magnitude earthquake struck the island’s eastern coast on Wednesday at 07:58 local time 23:58 (GMT).

At least nine people were killed and more than 1000 injured when the quake hit 18km (11 miles) south of Hualien.

More than 100 people are still understood to be trapped in collapsed tunnels and roads along the coastline.

Rescue operations to reach 77 people trapped in the Jinwen and Qingshui tunnels along the road in Hualien continued into the early hours of Thursday morning.

Pictures show how the road outside the Qingshui tunnel had simply fallen away.

There are many narrow, winding roads and tunnels carved out of the rock and mountains that run along Hualien’s rugged coastline.

The route is popular with tourists, famed for its spectacular views from the mountains out across the Pacific Ocean. But it is also known to be treacherous, not least because of the possibility of landslides.

One of the routes takes locals and tourists to the Taroko National Park, named after a landmark gorge, just outside Hualien, which is considered to be one of the natural wonders of Asia. Three of those who died were hikers on a trail there and 50 of those who are trapped are staff who were being transported to a popular hotel, ahead of a four-day long weekend.

It is unclear how long those inside will be trapped - and whether or not they have food and water, or can communicate with the outside world.

The earthquake also triggered tsunami alerts earlier on Wednesday in nearby Japanese and Philippine islands - but the alerts were later downgraded.

It caused the most damage in Hualien, where buildings fell, roads were blocked and train lines disrupted, leaving the remote region even more cut off from the rest of Taiwan.

“I was just getting out of bed when a clothes rack and a low cabinet fell over,” Ocean Tsai, who lives in Hualien, said. “It kept getting stronger, and I started worrying about our belongings at home. Fortunately, apart from the motorcycle tipping over, the damage was minimal.”

Social media was soon filled with extraordinary footage of landslides along the coast. They tumbled down the mountains, making huge clouds billow up from the sea as they crashed into it.

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