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Fears for 400 after Taiwan mudslide

> From the WeatherWatch archives

An estimated 400 Taiwanese are unaccounted for after a mudslide spawned by Typhoon Morakot struck their isolated mountain village, a police official said yesterday, and a newspaper quoted a resident as saying as many as 600 were buried.

Morakot dumped up to 2000mm of rain on some communities over the weekend before moving on to China, where it forced the evacuation of nearly 1 million people along the east coast. Earlier it had struck the Philippines, leaving at least 22 dead.

It has now been downgraded to a tropical storm.

A Taiwanese police official who identified himself by his surname, Wang, said about 100 people have been rescued by military helicopter or avoided the mudslide in southern Shiao Lin village.

One of the rescued villagers, Lin Chien-chung, told the United Evening News that he believes as many as 600 people were still buried by the mud.

“The mudslide covered a large part of the village including a primary school and many homes,” he was quoted as saying. “A part of the mountain above us just fell on the village.”

He did not explain the apparent discrepancy between his estimate of deaths and the policeman’s smaller estimate of people still missing.

The village was still cut off from the outside world last night, after flood waters destroyed a bridge about 12km away. Military helicopters have dropped provisions in the area and rescued survivors.

Taiwan’s official death toll from Morakot stands at 14. Another 51, not including the people in Shiao Lin, are listed as missing.

Morakot, meaning emerald in Thai, slammed into China’s Fujian province on Sunday carrying heavy rain and winds of 119km (119 kilometers) per hour, according to the China Meteorological Administration. At least one child died after a house collapsed in Zhejiang province.

Hundreds of villages and towns were flooded and more than 2,000 houses had collapsed, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

Village officials in Zhejiang rode bicycles to hand out drinking water and instant noodles to residents stranded by flooding, while rescuers tried to reach eight sailors on a cargo ship blown onto a reef off Fujian, Xinhua reported.

In Japan, meanwhile, Typhoon Etau slammed into the west coast yesterday. Twelve people were killed in raging floodwaters and landslides, and 10 others were missing, police said.

 

NZHERALD.CO.NZ

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