A former drug-sniffing dog who lost his job for being too friendly has emerged as the unlikely MVP, or most valuable player, of the Taiwan rescue teams searching for survivors of the nation’s strongest earthquake in 25 years.
At least 13 people were killed and more than 1,140 injured by a massive earthquake that struck the nation on Wednesday last week.
The quake measured 7.2 on the Richter scale and magnitude 7.4 on the moment magnitude scale.
Photo: Cheng Ching-yi, Taipei Times
Landslides around the epicenter in Hualien still blocked tunnels and roads, making the mountainous terrain around the county difficult for rescuers to access survivors and victims. Footage released by the county fire department on Saturday last week showed Roger, an eight-year-old Labrador, mounting a boulder that had fallen across a hiking trail near Hualien’s Taroko National Park. “Have you found something? Let’s go over there,” said a rescuer to Roger, who did not budge. Kaohsiung Mayor Chen Chi-mai (陳其邁), whose city sent a rescue team and dogs including Roger, said the Labrador specializes in “rubble pile search and rescue” and that he is trained to search for survivors.
“Roger must have found some clues, and his confused look made the handler feel something was up, and then they found the victim,” Chen said in a Facebook post.
Handler Lee Hsin-hung (李信宏) said Roger located a victim “just five minutes after setting off,” and praised the dog’s confidence in an unfamiliar terrain. Originally trained as a drug-sniffing dog as a pup, Roger was given his walking papers from that role because he was too friendly, which led to his switch to search-and-rescue missions.
Photo: Laurent Fievet, AFP / Hualien County Fire Department
“He’s very agile,” Lee said. “Like this time when he went to Shakadang Trail, it’s not a rescue site we can simulate (in training), but he’s not scared.”
The soon-to-retire dog has won hearts in Taiwan for his boisterous nature, lunging at reporters’ microphones during interviews and also destroying a chew toy given to him after his mission. Another search dog, three-year-old Wilson, a Jack Russell terrier, is getting accolades as well after footage emerged in Taiwanese media of his persistent scramble through immovable boulders. The quake’s aftermath was Wilson’s first mission, and he located two victims — a performance that handler Tseng Ching-lin (曾景麟) said he was “surprised” about. “He did not perform that well at tests compared with other dogs,” he told a reporter as he carried a tail-wagging Wilson in his arms. “He’s very smart, but he likes to play and he runs to other places,” Tseng said, as Wilson started to bite the microphone.
At least six people remain unaccounted for, while the number of people who cannot be accessed has steadily shrunk as authorities managed to fix roads and clear tunnels over the weekend.
Photo courtesy of the Hualien County Fire Department
Photo: AFP, Hualien County Fire Department
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