A utility pole was knocked down in Taichung's Heping District (和平) on Friday due to a landslide caused by heavy rain brought by Typhoon Khanun.
The downed pole caused a power outage for 27 households, Taiwan Power Co (Taipower, 台電) said. The Directorate-General of Highways said that it would likely take at least three days to clear the roadway so that Taipower crew could get in and repair the line.
Photo courtesy of member of the public via CNA
The landslide occurred along Highway No. 8 near Guguan (谷關), officials said, adding that nobody was injured in the landslide. Although Typhoon Khanun has already moved out of range of Taiwan, rainfall continues in the mountains, adding to the challenge of clearing debris, they said.
While roadwork continues, local residents are advised to take Highway No. 14A into the district via Hehuanshan (合歡山), or enter via Highway No. 7A from Yilan County, officials said.
Three batches of banana sauce imported from the Philippines were intercepted at the border after they were found to contain the banned industrial dye Orange G, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said yesterday. From today through Sept. 2 next year, all seasoning sauces from the Philippines are to be subject to the FDA’s strictest border inspection, meaning 100 percent testing for illegal dyes before entry is allowed, it said in a statement. Orange G is an industrial coloring agent that is not permitted for food use in Taiwan or internationally, said Cheng Wei-chih (鄭維智), head of the FDA’s Northern Center for
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UNDER PRESSURE: The report cited numerous events that have happened this year to show increased coercion from China, such as military drills and legal threats The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) aims to reinforce its “one China” principle and the idea that Taiwan belongs to the People’s Republic of China by hosting celebratory events this year for the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, the “retrocession” of Taiwan and the establishment of the UN, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said in its latest report to the Legislative Yuan. Taking advantage of the significant anniversaries, Chinese officials are attempting to assert China’s sovereignty over Taiwan through interviews with international news media and cross-strait exchange events, the report said. Beijing intends to reinforce its “one China” principle
A total lunar eclipse, an astronomical event often referred to as a “blood moon,” would be visible to sky watchers in Taiwan starting just before midnight on Sunday night, the Taipei Astronomical Museum said. The phenomenon is also called “blood moon” due to the reddish-orange hue it takes on as the Earth passes directly between the sun and the moon, completely blocking direct sunlight from reaching the lunar surface. The only light is refracted by the Earth’s atmosphere, and its red wavelengths are bent toward the moon, illuminating it in a dramatic crimson light. Describing the event as the most important astronomical phenomenon