Tainan ends search for quake victims
Tainan Mayor William Lai (賴清德) at 4:20pm
yesterday announced that the search-and-rescue operation at the Weiguan Jinlong
complex in Tainan, which collapsed in an earthquake on Feb. 6, has come to an
end, after the body of the last missing resident was found.
According to Central Emergency
Operations Center
statistics, the death toll from the magnitude 6.4 earthquake yesterday rose to
a total of 116, of which 114 occurred at the Weiguan Jinlong complex, with one
person who lived near the complex still missing.
The last body, which was recovered at
3:57pm yesterday, was the building’s management committee chairman, Hsieh
Chen-Yu (謝鎮宇), who lived in building G, Lai said.
Tainan Deputy Mayor Tseng Hsu-cheng (曾旭正) said the only person still missing after the earthquake is a
woman surnamed Lin (林), who lived near the Weiguan Jinlong complex and had a
habit of going out to exercise early every morning. Lin’s family has been
unable to contact her since the earthquake.
The use of heavy equipment to break up
and clear away rubble from the site was authorized in the hope of rescuing
everyone as soon as possible, Lai said, adding that experience gained from the
recovery work could be used as a reference by the National Fire Administration
when considering rescue procedures in the future.
If rescue workers can use heavy
equipment to retrieve bodies intact from the rubble, it means that such
equipment could also be used to accelerate the search for survivors in sections
that search-and-rescue personnel would not be able to reach by themselves, he
said.
Even though heavy equipment was ready
for use 36 hours after the earthquake, authorities were required to follow
regulations and could only allow their use 62 hours after the event, which
created a dilemma, Lai said.
The Construction and Planning
Administration said it would expand a two-year-old-building examination
project, increasing the number of buildings that are to receive subsidies of
NT$8,000 for surveys and improvements this year from 500 to 2,000.
Priority is to be given to buildings in
the six special municipalities and southern counties, with an emphasis to be
placed on ensuring the structural safety of buildings, the administration said,
adding that applications for the subsidy might begin as soon as next month.
The project, which is to examine the
ability of private buildings to resist earthquakes and provide a subsidy for
improvement measures, was planned in July last year, administration Director
Hsu Wen-lung (許文龍) said, adding that because of the earthquake, the agency
has decided to expand its scale to 2,000 buildings.
Preliminary evaluations are to include
checking for cracks on buildings’ beams and pillars and peeling on exterior
walls, Hsu said.
Due to southern residents’ concerns
about the structural safety of buildings they live in after the earthquake, the
administration is to subsidize buildings in southern Taiwan first, he added.
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2016/02/14/2003639340
Structure of the Lead:
WHO-Tainan Mayor William Lai
WHEN- yesterday
WHAT- the search-and-rescue operation at the Weiguan Jinlong complex in Tainan, has come to an end, after the body of the last missing resident was found.
WHY-not given
WHERE- at the Weiguan Jinlong complex in Tainan
HOW-not given
Keywords:
1.announce 宣布
2.rescue救援
3.earthquake地震
4.resident居民
5.victim受害者
6.collapse使倒塌
7.equipment設備
8.recover找到
9.structural結構的
10.examination審查
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