Taiwan earthquake: Strongest in 25 years causes buildings to collapse and a small tsunami
Taiwan’s strongest earthquake in a quarter century has killed at least four people, authorities said.
The national fire agency said four people died in Hualien County. Hualien was the epicentre of the quake that struck around 8am on Wednesday.
At least 57 were injured.
The quake, which Taiwan’s earthquake monitoring agency measured at a magnitude 7.2 on the Richter scale, damaged buildings and caused a small tsunami.
The US Geological Survey put the earthquake at 7.4.
A small tsunami hit southern Japanese islands.
Japan’s chief cabinet secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi said there has been no report of injury or damage in Japan.
He urged the residents in the Okinawa region to stay on high ground until all tsunami advisories are lifted.
He cautioned the people against disinformation and urged them to stay calm and assist others.
The Japan Meteorological Agency had forecast a tsunami of up to three metres for the southern Japanese island group of Okinawa.
In Asia, stocks followed the downward trend set by Wall Street, influenced by persistent high US yields and concerns stemming from a significant earthquake in the region, which could potentially disrupt the vital chip-making industry.
Taiwan’s shares also saw a roughly one per cent drop after a powerful earthquake with a magnitude of 7.2 struck Taipei, triggering a tsunami warning for the southern Japanese islands and the Philippines.
Taiwan, which is just off the coast of mainland China, is seen as a world-leader in the semiconductor industry. Markets will be looking at whether this will impact production, and what knock on effect it may have.
In January, amid political tensions between China and Taiwan, it was warned that the UK chip industry was “very exposed”.
Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “The Taiwan earthquake has turned markets more skittish, with investors already unnerved by data pointing to inflation staying stubborn in the US.
“The Nikkei fell to its lowest level in two weeks, following a tsunami warning for Japan’s Okinawa island prefecture”
A five-storey building in Taiwan’s Hualien appeared heavily damaged with the first floor collapsing and leaving the rest leaning at a 45-degree angle.
In the capital Taipei, tiles fell from older buildings and within some newer office complexes.
The earthquake struck at 7.58am with the epicentre about 11 miles south-south west of Hualien and 22 miles deep.
Train services were suspended across the island of 23 million people, as was subway service in Taipei, where a newly constructed above-ground line partially separated.
The national legislature, a converted school built before the Second World War, also had damage to walls and ceilings.
Schools evacuated their students to sports fields, equipping them with yellow safety helmets.
Some also covered themselves with textbooks to guard against falling objects as aftershocks continued.
Traffic along the east coast was brought to a virtual standstill, with landslides and falling debris hitting tunnels and highways in the mountainous region.
Videos posted by AP News Agency, showed collapsed buildings on their side:
Taipei resident Hsien-hsuen Keng said: “Earthquakes are a common occurrence, and I’ve grown accustomed to them. But today was the first time I was scared to tears by an earthquake. I was awakened by the earthquake. I had never felt such intense shaking before.”
She said her fifth-floor apartment shook so hard that “apart from earthquake drills in elementary school, this was the first time I had experienced such a situation”.
Wu Chien-fu, the head of Taiwan’s earthquake monitoring bureau, said effects were detected as far away as Kinmen, a Taiwanese-controlled island off the coast of China.
Chinese media confirmed the earthquake was felt in Shanghai and several provinces along China’s south-eastern coast.
China and Taiwan are about 100 miles apart. China issued no tsunami warnings for the Chinese mainland.
Residents of China’s Fujian province reported violent shaking, according to online outlet Jimu News.
One man told Jimu that the shaking awakened him and lasted about a minute.
In the Philippines, residents along the northern coast were told to evacuate to higher ground, but no major tsunami was reported about three hours after the quake.
Villagers in the provinces of Batanes, Cagayan, Ilocos Norte and Isabela were asked not to return to their homes until the tsunami alert was lifted, Teresito Bacolcol from the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said there was no tsunami threat to Hawaii or Guam.
The quake was believed to be the biggest in Taiwan since one in 1999 caused extensive damage.
Taiwan lies along the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’, the line of seismic faults encircling the Pacific Ocean where most of the world’s earthquakes occur.
Taiwan’s worst quake in recent years struck in 1999, with a magnitude of 7.7, causing 2,400 deaths, injuring around 100,000 and destroying thousands of buildings.
Press Association