Taiwan earthquake: ‘the lucky one’ survives second deadly tremor and recalls terror of 1999 disaster that killed 2,400 people
PUBLISHED : Saturday, 06 February, 2016, 11:33pm
UPDATED : Saturday, 06 February, 2016, 11:35pm
Lawrence Chung in Taipei and Kathy Gao
A survivor prays for the safe return of other people who are still missing after Saturday’s deadly earthquake that struck the city of Tainan in Taiwan. Photo: EPA
A middle-aged housewife who survived Taiwan’s devastating 1999 earthquake that killed about 2,400 people has spoken of her horror after living through her second deadly earthquake on Saturday.
The woman, who identified herself only by her surname of Chien, was asleep with her husband and daughter in their sixth floor flat in the 16-storey Wei Guan residential complex when it collapsed after a magnitude-6.4 quake struck the southern city of Tainan just before dawn.
“I was trapped in badly damaged bedroom, along with my husband and daughter,” Chien told the Central News Agency.
Rescue workers search a collapsed building on Saturday morning after the deadly earthquake in the city of Tainan in Taiwan. Photo: AP
She said she thought they were all going to die as the result of a gas explosion because the smell of gas escaping from broken pipes was thick in the air. “Although my home was once again destroyed, I still feel lucky as all three of us were saved,” she said.
The family of three were finally rescued from the rubble after being trapped for three hours.
Chien added: “I lived in Wufeng when the biggest earthquake in 100 years rocked central Taiwan on September 21, 1999.
“I couldn’t believe that I had to encounter another serious quake after getting married and then moving to Tainan.”
The Wei Guan building toppled over on its side, with the upper floors collapsing on one another like a folding accordion.
A teenage woman living few storeys above Chien, who lay trapped with her mother under a bed following the building’s collapse, told Taiwanese media that she had drunk her own urine after starting to panic when she became thirsty.
She said they started to worry that it might take rescuers a long time to rescue them so her mother suggested she drink her own urine, Central News Agency said. But after two hours the teenager and her mother were among the first group of 34 residents that were rescued by firefighters.
Meanwhile, a pet cat was said to have acted as a “guardian angel” and helped to save a seven-year-old boy trapped in the building, ETTV, the Taiwanese cable TV network reported.
The cat caught the attention of a rescuer when it kept meowing on a balcony amid the rubble, a rescuer told ETTV. “I saw something moving on the balcony and then heard the meowing,”he said, adding that he then cut open the iron bars of a window and found the boy sitting crying on the balcony’s floor.
Mainlander Wang Mingyang, who was on visit from Jilin province, said he was woken up by the tremors at 4am on Saturday while in a hotel in Kaohsiung,near the quake’s epicentre.
“The hotel building was shaking violently,” Wang said. “I felt I was about to die.”
He said was in Taiwan to spend Lunar New Year with his Taiwanese girlfriend. “The earthquake was not how I imagined it would be,” he said. “The floor was tilting and the lamps and stuff on the table were all moving. Some things fell off the table.”
Wang and his girlfriend drove to Taipei by bus on Saturday after train services were suspended.