The air force said yesterday that despite having found no trace of an AT-3 jet trainer and its two pilots, missing since last Wednesday, it would continue searching until their fate was known.
As of yesterday, planes and helicopters had flown 46 sorties and 270 people were searching in a 100km2 area of the central mountain range south of the country's highest mountain, Yushan.
The search included RF-5 reconnaissance aircraft, seldom used for non-military action.
The RF-5 provided aerial photographs of the areas where the air force believed the AT-3 had disappeared. These areas are in Taitung County, but the search zone is much larger.
The army has now sent 114 special operations troops to join the search, with another 200 standing by.
The deployment of spy planes and special operations troops makes this search the largest in recent years.
The search was also given unprecedented publicity because air force commander-in-chief General Li Tien-yu (李天羽) went in person to Taitung to coordinate the search.
At a regular defense ministry press conference yesterday, air force political warfare chief Lieutenant General Liu Chuan-li (
The twin-seat AT-3 went missing last Wednesday during a regular training flight from its base at the air force academy in Kanshan, Kaohsiung County.
The two pilots were training for simulated stall conditions when it went missing, the air force said.
Liu said the search had been futile so far mainly because of the landscape and bad weather.
"The mountainous areas where we think the plane disappeared are covered with dense forests. The forests are primitive ones with poor access," Liu said.
"It is difficult for ground search teams to move even 100m in these forests. It is also not easy to look for traces of the plane from the air since the forests are so dense," he said.
DEEPER REVIEW: After receiving 19 hospital reports of suspected food poisoning, the Taipei Department of Health applied for an epidemiological investigation A buffet restaurant in Taipei’s Xinyi District (信義) is to be fined NT$3 million (US$91,233) after it remained opened despite an order to suspend operations following reports that 32 people had been treated for suspected food poisoning, the Taipei Department of Health said yesterday. The health department said it on Tuesday received reports from hospitals of people who had suspected food poisoning symptoms, including nausea, vomiting, stomach pain and diarrhea, after they ate at an INPARADISE (饗饗) branch in Breeze Xinyi on Sunday and Monday. As more than six people who ate at the restaurant sought medical treatment, the department ordered the
A strong continental cold air mass and abundant moisture bringing snow to mountains 3,000m and higher over the past few days are a reminder that more than 60 years ago Taiwan had an outdoor ski resort that gradually disappeared in part due to climate change. On Oct. 24, 2021, the National Development Council posted a series of photographs on Facebook recounting the days when Taiwan had a ski resort on Hehuanshan (合歡山) in Nantou County. More than 60 years ago, when developing a branch of the Central Cross-Island Highway, the government discovered that Hehuanshan, with an elevation of more than 3,100m,
Taiwan’s population last year shrank further and births continued to decline to a yearly low, the Ministry of the Interior announced today. The ministry published the 2024 population demographics statistics, highlighting record lows in births and bringing attention to Taiwan’s aging population. The nation’s population last year stood at 23,400,220, a decrease of 20,222 individuals compared to 2023. Last year, there were 134,856 births, representing a crude birth rate of 5.76 per 1,000 people, a slight decline from 2023’s 135,571 births and 5.81 crude birth rate. This decrease of 715 births resulted in a new record low per the ministry’s data. Since 2016, which saw
SECURITY: To protect the nation’s Internet cables, the navy should use buoys marking waters within 50m of them as a restricted zone, a former navy squadron commander said A Chinese cargo ship repeatedly intruded into Taiwan’s contiguous and sovereign waters for three months before allegedly damaging an undersea Internet cable off Kaohsiung, a Liberty Times (sister paper of the Taipei Times) investigation revealed. Using publicly available information, the Liberty Times was able to reconstruct the Shunxing-39’s movements near Taiwan since Double Ten National Day last year. Taiwanese officials did not respond to the freighter’s intrusions until Friday last week, when the ship, registered in Cameroon and Tanzania, turned off its automatic identification system shortly before damage was inflicted to a key cable linking Taiwan to the rest of