115 bodies pulled out from Taiwan quake rubble; 2 missing
Rescuers have pulled out 115 dead a week since a powerful earthquake
struck Taiwan's oldest city of Tainan, leaving only two missing in the
rubble of a collapsed 17-story residential complex, authorities said on
Saturday.
All but two of the dead were found at the ruins of the Weiguan
Golden Dragon complex, which toppled when the 6.4-magnitude earthquake
struck last Saturday just ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday. A total
of 327 people in the building survived.
According to Taiwan's Interior Ministry, workers extracted scores
more bodies yesterday and today morning. Two are still listed as
missing.
Authorities have detained the building's developer Lin Ming-hui and
two architects this week on suspicion of negligent homicide amid
accusations his firm cut corners in the construction.
Tainan city officials said they will inspect several dozen other
developments built by Lin, as well as other buildings in the Weiguan
compound that did not collapse.
Earthquakes frequently strike Taiwan, but usually cause little or no
damage, particularly since more stringent building regulations were
introduced following a magnitude-7.6 quake in 1999 that killed more than
2,300.
Reviewed by vishmodeb
on
7:17 AM
Rating:
No comments: