6.7-magnitude quake hits Taiwan: CENC

Xinhua
A 6.7 magnitude earthquake jolted a sea area near Hualien County in Taiwan at 1:01pm Thursday, according to the China Earthquake Networks Center.
Xinhua

A 6.7 magnitude earthquake jolted a sea area near Hualien County in Taiwan at 1:01pm Thursday, according to the China Earthquake Networks Center.

The quake lasted for about 10 seconds and lamps shook sharply inside buildings in Taipei. Many people screamed when the strongest earthquake this year rocked Taiwan.

TV footage showed the earthquake smashed glass in buildings in Hualien, where the earthquake's highest intensity on Taiwan's 7-tier intensity scale was felt.

"It was the strongest earthquake I've felt in Taipei since the September 21 earthquake in 1999," a Taipei resident surnamed Kao said.

The September 21 earthquake shook Nantou county in Taiwan in 1999, killing more than 2,400 people and injuring over 10,000 others.

All elevators of Taipei 101, the island's tallest building, were suspended after Thursday's earthquake.

A building in Chang'an East Road in Taipei tilted after the quake.

Operation of the metro systems in Taipei and Taoyuan has been suspended, and trains of Taiwan Railways running between Fenglin and Yilan stations have been suspended after the earthquake.

The epicenter was monitored at 24.02 degrees north latitude and 121.65 degrees east longitude, with the quake striking at a depth of 24 km, the center said.

No immediate casualties were reported.


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