Tuesday, August 11, 2009

TAIWAN MILITARY RESCUES SOME 300 TYPHOON VICTIMS

TAIWAN MILITARY RESCUES SOME 300 TYPOON VICTIMS

CISHAN, Taiwan—Taiwan's military rescued about 300 people Tuesday after a mudslide touched off by Typhoon Morakot consumed a village, but scores remain missing. A helicopter on a relief operation in the area crashed into a mountain with three crew aboard.

Chen Chung-hsein, an official in charge of the relief effort, said it was unclear if the two pilots and one technician had survived the crash near Wutal in Pingtung county, where the chopper was delivering food and trying to reach villagers.

Morakot, which triggered the worst flooding in Taiwan in 50 years, dumped as much as 80 inches (two meters) of rain at the weekend before moving on to China.

Taiwanese authorities put the confirmed death toll from Morakot at 50 and listed 58 people as missing, not including the residents missing in Shiao Lin, whose fate has been unclear since Sundays' mudslide. At least 400 people there are unaccounted for. Access to the area—in the southern reaches of the island's heavily foliated mountaneous spine—is restricted to the military.

After pummeling Twaiwan, Morakat slammed into China's Fujian province, bringing heavy rain and winds of 74 miles (119 kilometers) per hour, according to the China Meteorological Administration. Eight people have died in three provinces, the Civil Affairs Ministry said.

In Taiwan, rescue operations were being carried out by helicopters, which hovered over the village looking for survivors.

Officials said more than 300 people were brought out Tuesday on up to 120 flights from a large mountaineous area in Kaohsiung to an improvised landing zone at Cishan Junior High School. The people saved came from Shiao Lin and surrounding villages, officials said.

Those rescued Tuesday escaped the mudslide by running to higher ground, from where they were plucked by the helicopters. But those saved from other villages—which are miles (kilometers) away from Shiao Lin—had enough time to run to open ground.

One of the women ferried out Tuesday implored the military to do everything to rescue her family and friends. “There are still a lot of people trapped inside,” Lin Mel-ying told television station ETTV. “Please go faster, so they can be saved.”

Taiwan's National Fire Agency said 100 villagers were buried alive when the mudslide hit, though it did not offer details to back up that assessment. But some of the 30 residents who were among those rescued Monday said the figure was far higher—perhaps as many as 600.

Taiwan's population registry lists Shaio Lin as having 1,3000 inhabitants, although many are believed to live elsewhere.

The village's almost total isolation complicated reporting about its fate. Shiao Lin was caught off after floodwaters destroyed a bridge about eight miles (12 kilometers) away. A back road wending its way northward toward the mountain community of Alishan was also believed to be cut off, and with rain still falling in the area, prospects for an early resumption of overland travel were poor.
A woman rescued Monday to Taiwan's China Times Newspaper that she fled with her husband and their baby from their two-story Shiao Lin home minutes before the mudslide buried it.

“We heard two loud bangs,” the woman surnamed Chi was quoted as saying. “The sky was filled with dust like a volcanic eruption, and flood waters, mud and rocks streamed onto the roads.”

Officials said more than 600 people from nearby villages survived by running to open ground and have been waiting since Sunday for rescuers.

Television footage showed the streets of one village covered by thick mud and rubble. A 50-year-old man from Jilai Village was swept 1.2 miles (two kilometers) away when the mudslides that struck Shaio Lin rushed down a nearby mountain. According to news reports, he survived by holding on to a log.

In China's Fuijan province, where the storm headed after Taiwan, authorities ordered 1.5 million people to leave the area, sending them to schools, government offices, hospitals and the homes of relatives, where they will remain until the rain stops and waters recede, the Civil Affairs Ministry said.

Morakot damaged or destroyed more than 10,000 homes and flooded over 1 million acres (400,000 hectares) of cropland, the ministry said. It said direct economic losses have have been estimated at 9.7 billion yuan $l.4 billion).

The official Xinhua News Agency said the storm brought the heaviest rainfall in six decades to parts of southeastern China, with one weather station in Zhejiang province recording nearly 49 inches (124 centimeters) on Aug. 6-10.

The heavy rains triggered a massive landslide in Pengxi, a town in Wenzhou city of eastern China's Zhejiang province, destroying seven three-story apartment buildings at the foot of a mountain late Monday, an official surnamed Chen from the Pengxi government told The Associated Press.

Xinhua reported than an unknown number of residents were buried in the landslide, although Chen put the number at six. All were pulled out alive but two later died of their injuries, he said. It was not clear if those were included in the Civil Affairs Ministry's toll of eight killed.

Associated Press writers Annie Huang in Taipei, Taiwan, and Gillian Wong and Christopher Bodeen in Beijing contributed to this report.

Http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090811/ap_on_re_as/as_asia_storm

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