Civic groups and charity organizations have quickly mobilized members and resources to aid victims and families affected by the series of gas explosions in Greater Kaohsiung from late Thursday night to early yesterday morning.
About 1,200 people have asked for temporary housing, the Greater Kaohsiung Government said, adding that it has set up 10 temporary shelters in schools and activity centers.
Dozens of hotels in the city joined the effort by offering free lodging, as well as laundry and washroom facilities, for people left homeless or whose houses were badly damaged by the blasts.
Photo: Wang Min-wei, Taipei Times
Netizens lauded the hoteliers for showing compassion and generosity to Kaohsiung residents. The hoteliers included Ahiruyah Guesthouse, Ever Luck Hotel, Harmonious Hotel, Sanduo Business Hotel, Delton Hotel and Hotel R Kaohsiung.
More hotel operators joined the effort later, including Red Residence Hotel, The Lees Hotel, Chateau de Chine Hotel Kaohsiung, Sam Hotel, Ambassador Hotel Kaohsiung, Just Sleep Hotel Kaohsiung Zhongzheng and 85 Skycity Hotel.
More than 12,000 homes had no power and water supply, authorities said.
Photo: CNA
A spokesperson for the Buddhist Compassion Relief Tzu Chi Foundation said its coordinating center in Greater Kaohsiung had started distributing relief supplies to the affected households, including delivering 300 portable beds to the area’s emergency shelters. The foundation dispatched more than 100 members and volunteers to hospitals to assist the injured, while others went to the mortuary to help the families of deceased victims with funeral arrangements.
Service stations have also been set up near the explosion sites to provide hot meals for firefighters, rescue crewmembers and local residents, the foundation added.
The Kaohsiung branch of the Red Cross Society said it had transported vital supplies, such as blankets, towels, sleeping bags, bottled water, personal hygiene kits and meal pouches to several schools in the area, which are being used as emergency shelters.
Photo: CNA
The Sunshine Social Welfare Foundation, which specializes in helping burn victims, said it had set up a telephone hotline for emergency assistance and counseling.
Greater Kaohsiung government officials said many charity organizations and social welfare foundations were already in contact and had mobilized their networks to donate emergency supplies and materials to help victims of the accident.
They urged the public not to call the local government’s Social Affairs Bureau if they want to make a donation, after the bureau’s phone lines were jammed yesterday with calls from people offering help.
Photo: CNA
The bureau has set up an account with the Bank of Kaohsiung’s Municipal Treasury Department (高雄銀行公庫部), account number 102103031319, to accept public donations for disaster relief.
Donations from companies and individuals around the nation have also poured in.
Local enterprises donated millions of New Taiwan dollars, including Formosa Plastics Group, one of the nation’s leading conglomerates; Advanced Semiconductor Engineering Inc, a leading chip packaging and testing services provider; Hon Hai Group, the world’s largest contract electronics maker; electronics conglomerate Kinpo Group; and computer maker Acer Inc.
Smartphone maker HTC Corp, Greater Kaohsiung-based E-United Group, finance-leasing Chailease Holding Co, chip designer MediaTek Inc and Fubon Financial Holding Co also made donations.
Total contributions from these enterprises alone reached nearly NT$145 million (US$4.8 million), while Taiwanese businesses in Beijing and Shanghai donated another NT$10 million.
The Taipei City Government has also established a postal transfer account, with the donated funds to be forwarded to its counterpart in Kaohsiung to help the victims of the accident.
Additional reporting by Jennifer Huang and CNA
LEVERAGE: China did not ‘need to fire a shot’ to deny Taiwan airspace over Africa when it owns ‘half the continent’s debt,’ a US official said, calling it economic warfare The EU has raised concerns about overflight rights following the delay of President William Lai’s (賴清德) planned state visit to the Kingdom of Eswatini after three African nations denied overflight clearance for his charter at the last minute. Taiwanese allies Paraguay and Saint Kitts and Nevis, as well as several US lawmakers and the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC) condemned China for allegedly pressuring the countries. Lai was scheduled to fly directly to Taiwan’s only African ally from yesterday to Sunday to celebrate the 40th anniversary of King Mswati III’s accession and his 58th birthday, but Seychelles, Mauritius and Madagascar suddenly revoked
The number of pet cats in Taiwan surpassed that of pet dogs for the first time last year, reaching 1,742,033, a 32.8 percent increase from 2023, the Ministry of Agriculture said yesterday, citing a survey. By contrast, the number of pet dogs declined slightly by 1.2 percent over the same period to 1,462,528, the ministry said. Despite the shift, households with dogs still slightly outnumber those with cats by 1.2 percent. However, while the number of households with multiple dogs has remained relatively stable, households keeping more than two cats have increased, contributing to the overall rise in the feline population. The trend
China on Wednesday teased in a video an aircraft carrier that could be its fourth, and the first using nuclear power, while making an allusion to Taiwan and vowing to further build up its islands, as it looks to boost maritime power, secure resources and bolster territorial claims. The video, issued on the eve of the 77th founding anniversary of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy, featured fictional officers with names that are homophones of three commissioned aircraft carriers, the Liaoning (遼寧), Shandong (山東) and Fujian (福建). Titled Into the Deep, it showed a 19-year-old named “Hejian” (何劍) joining the group, sparking
BIG YEAR: The company said it would also release its A12 chip the same year to keep a ‘reliable stream of new silicon technologies’ flowing to its customers Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday said its newest A13 chip is to enter volume production in 2029 as the chipmaker seeks to hold onto its tech leadership and demand for next-generation chips used in artificial intelligence (AI), high-performance-computing (HPC) and mobile applications. TSMC, the world’s biggest contract chipmaker, also unveiled its A12 chip at its annual technology symposium in Santa Clara, California. The A12 chip, which features TSMC’s super-power-rail technology to provide backside power delivery for AI and HPC applications, is also to enter volume production in 2029, a year after the scheduled release of the A14 chip. The technology moves