TAINAN, Taiwan — Families waited anxiously on Sunday as rescuers painstaking pulled survivors from the remains of a high-rise residential building that collapsed in a powerful, shallow earthquake in southern Taiwan, which has killed at least 26 people.
The emergency center in Tainan, the worst-hit city, said that 171 people had been rescued from the building following the magnitude-6.4 quake that struck at dawn Saturday.
Tainan Mayor Lai Ching-te said in interviews from the site of the building collapse that 124 people were estimated to be still trapped, many at the bottom of the wreckage. Lai said that they had been able to rescue many people by using information from residents who got out.
Also rescued from the rubble was Chiu Guo-hsiung, 32, who was able to tell rescuers his name and other information. A woman and a 6-month-old baby girl were pulled out and rushed to a hospital.
A man in his 60s, whose son escaped and whose daughter-in-law was in serious condition in a hospital, was trying to help rescuers pinpoint his grandsons. “My 11- and 12-year-old grandsons are still inside on the ninth floor,” said the man, who only gave his surname, Huang. “I told my son not to buy an apartment here; it was suspiciously cheap.”
Beside him, another man nodded in agreement as he waited for news of his own relatives on the seventh floor.









