Though Typhoon Nari has moved far beyond Taipei, many caught in the storm's path of destruction were still picking up the pieces and counting their losses yesterday.
As of midnight, the number of deaths in Taipei City stood at 19, with another six missing and 135 injured, according to the municipal fire department.
Nari was downgraded to a tropical storm yesterday.
PHOTO: CHANG CHIA-MING, TAIPEI TIMES
The city government also reported that six houses were destroyed and 49 homes were partially damaged.
More than 810,000 people in the greater Taipei area were still without electricity as of press time yesterday, and 18,000 families were without drinking water. More than 290,000 homes were without phone services.
The city plans to open most schools and government work offices today.
In Taipei County, the death toll came to 15, with 10 still missing.
Twenty-five houses were destroyed and another two partially damaged, according to the county government's fire department.
Livestock losses were estimated at more than NT$55 million and over 70 hectares of rice paddies were submerged.
In Keelung City, nine people were reported dead and three missing.
The county will also reopen most schools and government offices today except in Shihchih City, Rueifang Township, Shuangshi Village, Pingshih Village and Kongliao Village.
The county government called on the areas spared by the storm to donate mineral water, dried foods, sleeping bags, batteries and flashlights.
President Chen Shui-bian (
Donning rubber boots and wearing a solemn expression on his face, Chen listened to briefings on ongoing disaster relief operations as he stood on the basement train platform at the Taipei Railway Station.
The station had been completely flooded like many other underground areas around the city the previous day, when Nari dumped record-breaking amounts of rainfall on northern Taiwan.
The president instructed all related government agencies to step up relief efforts and ordered the military to mobilize even more troops to help with rescue and clean-up operations as the storm stubbornly refused to leave Taiwan, staying stationary over the central part of the nation.
Chen also traveled to the city's Nankang and Neihu suburbs to inspect the flood damage there.
Call 02-8127-1142 to arrange donations of essential items. Cash donors can send money to the county's social affairs bureau at the Panchiao branch of the Bank of Taiwan. The account number is 027-038-002-803.
Taiwanese Olympic badminton men’s doubles gold medalist Wang Chi-lin (王齊麟) and his new partner, Chiu Hsiang-chieh (邱相榤), clinched the men’s doubles title at the Yonex Taipei Open yesterday, becoming the second Taiwanese team to win a title in the tournament. Ranked 19th in the world, the Taiwanese duo defeated Kang Min-hyuk and Ki Dong-ju of South Korea 21-18, 21-15 in a pulsating 43-minute final to clinch their first doubles title after teaming up last year. Wang, the men’s doubles gold medalist at the 2020 and 2024 Olympics, partnered with Chiu in August last year after the retirement of his teammate Lee Yang
FALSE DOCUMENTS? Actor William Liao said he was ‘voluntarily cooperating’ with police after a suspect was accused of helping to produce false medical certificates Police yesterday questioned at least six entertainers amid allegations of evasion of compulsory military service, with Lee Chuan (李銓), a member of boy band Choc7 (超克7), and actor Daniel Chen (陳大天) among those summoned. The New Taipei City District Prosecutors’ Office in January launched an investigation into a group that was allegedly helping men dodge compulsory military service using falsified medical documents. Actor Darren Wang (王大陸) has been accused of being one of the group’s clients. As the investigation expanded, investigators at New Taipei City’s Yonghe Precinct said that other entertainers commissioned the group to obtain false documents. The main suspect, a man surnamed
US Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer began talks with high-ranking Chinese officials in Switzerland yesterday aiming to de-escalate a dispute that threatens to cut off trade between the world’s two biggest economies and damage the global economy. The US delegation has begun meetings in Geneva with a Chinese delegation led by Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng (何立峰), Xinhua News Agency said. Diplomats from both sides also confirmed that the talks have begun, but spoke anonymously and the exact location of the talks was not made public. Prospects for a major breakthrough appear dim, but there is
The number of births in Taiwan fell to an all-time monthly low last month, while the population declined for the 16th consecutive month, Ministry of the Interior data released on Friday showed. The number of newborns totaled 8,684, which is 704 births fewer than in March and the lowest monthly figure on record, the ministry said. That is equivalent to roughly one baby born every five minutes and an annual crude birthrate of 4.52 per 1,000 people, the ministry added. Meanwhile, 17,205 deaths were recorded, resulting in a natural population decrease of 8,521, the data showed. More people are also leaving Taiwan, with net