Resilient Taiwan responded fast to earthquake after years honing skills
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[April 04, 2024]
By Yimou Lee
HUALIEN, Taiwan (Reuters) - When a 7.2 magnitude earthquake hit Taiwan's
scenic and largely rural east coast county of Hualien on Wednesday,
local official Chang Tung-yao knew exactly what to do, having
experienced a similar temblor six years before.
Within two hours of the quake, which struck just before 8 a.m. (0000
GMT) as people were getting ready for work, Chang said an emergency
shelter was arranged at a nearby school where more than 130 residents
ended up spending the night.
"Joined-up contact with government departments was key," Chang, a
neighborhood chief, the lowest level of elected official in Taiwan, told
Reuters.
Since the 2018 earthquake of magnitude 6.4, in which seven people died,
Chang said local authorities have strengthened coordination with
government units and non-governmental organizations for disaster
response and relief.
This time, county officials and police along with other units who helped
evacuate residents in affected areas of downtown Hualien city worked
together to clear one of the damaged buildings before it could collapse
in any aftershocks.
"Everyone is doing their job. The county government and the local
administrative office worked together to minimize the damage as much as
possible," Chang said.
WHY IS TAIWAN SO PRONE TO EARTHQUAKES?
Taiwan is no stranger to earthquakes, being located near the junction of
two tectonic plates, and many are concentrated along the picturesque,
mainly rural and sparsely populated east coast. The region is also a
major draw for tourists with its rugged mountains, hot spring resorts
and tranquil farms.
More than 100 people were killed in an earthquake in southern Taiwan in
2016, while a 7.3 magnitude quake killed more than 2,000 people in 1999.
That 1999 quake, commonly referred to as the "921 quake" as it hit on
Sept. 21, was a spur for the government to revise building codes and
strengthen disaster management laws.
Sept. 21 is now a designated day for Taiwan-wide disaster drills and on
this day mock alert messages for disasters such as earthquake and
tsunami are sent to people's mobile phones, and schools around the
island stage evacuation drills.
Yet Tai Yun-fa, a structural engineer who runs Taiwan's Alfa Safe that
develops quake-resistant building materials, said that while a
tightening of building codes had helped better prepare the island for
disaster, some developers were still cutting corners.
"The focus when it comes to development is still the lowest price, so in
that case you can't have the best quality."
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Relatives walk with a man rescued from a remote area in Hualien,
Taiwan, April 4, 2024. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
LEARNING THE LESSONS
In Hualien, Donna Wu, deputy director of the county branch of The
Mustard Seed Mission, a Christian group, said the response in 2018
had been chaotic and they had learned their lesson.
"Everyone was doing the same thing. Tasks were not coordinated," she
said. "This time, each group has different tasks."
Taiwan has another compelling reason to ready its response - the
potential for attack from China, which has been ramping up military
and political pressure to try and force Taiwan's
democratically-elected government to give in to Beijing's
sovereignty claims.
The earthquake alert system, with its piercing alarm sounding on
mobile phones, is the same one the government would use to warn of
an impending Chinese air raid.
Taiwan holds its Min'an civil defense drills annually, nominally to
focus on natural disasters, though last year it also covered how to
respond to the aftermath of a Chinese attack as part of those
exercises.
Taiwan's Ministry of Digital Affairs, which only began operating in
2022 and has been leading the charge to ensure the resilience of
communication networks, reported largely unaffected networks after
the latest quake, especially internet services.
Taiwanese cities and counties have rescuers on stand-by 24 hours a
day, ready to respond almost at a moment's notice to disasters.
Less than an hour after the latest quake struck, for example, the
government in the southern city of Kaohsiung had mobilized its
rescue teams to go to Hualien and sent them to the nearby air base
in Pingtung to be flown in by the air force.
Those teams regularly go to other disaster zones around the world,
including Turkey when it was hit by a major quake last year,
offering a "soft power" diplomacy for Taiwan whose government has
close to no official diplomatic recognition despite its strong
democratic credentials.
Sandra Oudkirk, the de facto U.S. ambassador to Taiwan, praised the
response in a message to the Taiwanese people carried on Facebook.
"Taiwan has demonstrated a successful model of disaster prevention,
disaster management, and humanitarian rescue to communities around
the world," she wrote.
(Reporting by Yimou Lee; additional reporting and writing by Ben
Blanchard and Angie Teo in Taipei; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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