Mainland tourists missing in Taiwan

0 CommentsPrint E-mail China.org.cn, October 25, 2010
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 Editor's Notes



  

Hundreds of mainland tourists have been stranded in Taiwan by heavy rains brought by typhoon Megi since October 21, 2010, with a tour bus stuck in a caved-in section of road. By October 24, 54 stranded mainland tourists were lifted out of danger by helicopters, but 20 other mainland tourists remained missing. 

 

 Latest Updates

 

 

Rescuers searching a damaged tourist bus on October 24 in Taiwan.

• Taiwan called to make all-out searche effort
Families of missing mainlanders see hopes dim
Driver confirmed dead, tourists still missing
Grim discovery in tourist bus search
Families of missing mainlanders arrive in Taiwan
Taiwan continue searching for missing tourists
• 54 mainland tourists saved, 20 still missing
Mainland concerns over stranded mainland tourists
Megi strands mainland visitors to Taiwan
70 stranded tourists in Taiwan rescued
20 mainland tourists missing as typhoon hits Taiwan

 

 Typhoon Megi



 

A satellite image of Megi in south China.

The name "Megi" means "catfish" in the Korean language. It was the first typhoon of 2010 in the Pacific Basin to achieve "super typhoon" status. China began preparing for Megi on October 18 by issuing an orange alert to local authorities and advising all vessels to return to port. The typhoon struck Taiwan at about 06:00 GMT on October 23 and brought continuous and heavy rains to the island, resulting in landslides along the Suao-Hualien Highway.

Typhoon Megi lands in SE China, 270,000 evacuated
Typhoon Megi triggers rockslides in Taiwan
China braces for the year's strongest typhoon

 

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