TAIPEI, Taiwan, Aug. 10, 2009

Deadly Typhoon Deluges Taiwan, Slams China

Hundreds Missing in Taiwan; Landslide Buries Unknown Number of Residents in Eastern China

    • People get a ride on a bulldozer driving through a flooded area in Cangnan county, in east China's Zhejiang province, Monday, Aug. 10, 2009. In China, a massive landslide triggered by Typhoon Morakot toppled seven apartment buildings, an official said Tuesday.

      People get a ride on a bulldozer driving through a flooded area in Cangnan county, in east China's Zhejiang province, Monday, Aug. 10, 2009. In China, a massive landslide triggered by Typhoon Morakot toppled seven apartment buildings, an official said Tuesday.  (AP Photo)

    • Taiwanese people gather in floodwater in Chiatung Town, Pintung County, southern Taiwan after Typhoon Morakot hit the area, Aug. 9, 2009.

      Taiwanese people gather in floodwater in Chiatung Town, Pintung County, southern Taiwan after Typhoon Morakot hit the area, Aug. 9, 2009.  (AP Photo)

    • Two villagers walk in a flooded village in Cangnan county, eastern China Aug. 9, 2009. Typhoon Morakot slammed into China Sunday just hours after nearly 1 million people evacuated the east coast.

      Two villagers walk in a flooded village in Cangnan county, eastern China Aug. 9, 2009. Typhoon Morakot slammed into China Sunday just hours after nearly 1 million people evacuated the east coast.  (AP)

    • Chinese paramilitary policemen help to evacuate local fishermen in preparation for Typhoon Morakot in Wenzhou city, east Chinas Zhejiang province on Thursday. In Zhejiang province, 2,076 ships had returned to harbor while passenger liner services in Wenzhou and Taizhou cities were suspended.

      Chinese paramilitary policemen help to evacuate local fishermen in preparation for Typhoon Morakot in Wenzhou city, east Chinas Zhejiang province on Thursday. In Zhejiang province, 2,076 ships had returned to harbor while passenger liner services in Wenzhou and Taizhou cities were suspended.  (Imaginechina via AP Images)

    • A rescuer helps a crying baby out of floodwaters after Typhoon Morakot hit Pintung county, southern Taiwan, Sunday, Aug. 9, 2009. The storm dumped more than 80 inches of rain on some southern counties on Friday and Saturday, the worst flooding to hit the area in half a century.

      A rescuer helps a crying baby out of floodwaters after Typhoon Morakot hit Pintung county, southern Taiwan, Sunday, Aug. 9, 2009. The storm dumped more than 80 inches of rain on some southern counties on Friday and Saturday, the worst flooding to hit the area in half a century.  (AP Photo)

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(CBS/ AP)  A mudslide touched off by a deadly typhoon buried a remote mountain village in Taiwan, leaving at least 400 people unaccounted for, while a massive landslide in China toppled seven apartment buildings, an official said Tuesday.

Typhoon Morakot slammed Taiwan over the weekend with as much as 80 inches of rain before crossing the 112-mile-wide Taiwan Strait and hitting China.

The storm inflicted the worst flooding the island has seen in at least a half-century, submerging large swaths of farmland in chocolate-brown muck and swamping city streets.

Taiwanese authorities put the confirmed death toll in Taiwan at 38, but that seemed certain to rise. The country's Cabinet set aside NT$20 billion ($600 million) in emergency funds to help with relief work and to compensate victims' families.

A disaster appeared to be unfolding at the isolated southern village of Shiao Lin, hit by a mudslide Sunday at about 6 a.m. local time - while many people were still asleep - and now cut off by land from the outside world.

Speaking to The Associated Press, a Taiwanese police official who identified himself only by his surname, Wang, said 400 people were unaccounted for in the village. Wang said 100 people had been rescued or otherwise avoided the brunt of the disaster.

One of the rescued villagers, an unidentified middle-aged man, told police that his family of 10 was wiped out.

"They're gone," he said, according to a local photographer who overheard the exchange. "All gone."

Another rescued villager, Lin Chien-chung, told the United Evening News he believes as many as 600 people were buried in the mudslide.

"The mudslide covered a large part of the village including a primary school and many homes," Lin was quoted as saying. "A part of the mountain above us just fell on the village."

Lin said he and several neighbors moved to higher ground several hours before the mudslide hit because torrential rains had flooded their homes.

Taiwan's population register lists Shiao Lin as having 1,300 inhabitants, though many are believed to live elsewhere.

Under leaden gray skies, military helicopters hovered over the community, dropping food and looking for survivors. They were unable to land because of the slippery terrain.

Shiao Lin was cut off after floodwaters destroyed a bridge about 8 miles away. A back road wending its way northward toward the mountain community of Alishan was also believed to be cut off, and with rain still falling in the area, the prospects for an early resumption of overland travel were poor.

Elsewhere in Taiwan, an additional 62 people were listed as missing.

The typhoon's path took it almost directly over the capital of Taipei, but its most destructive effects were in the heavily agricultural south and along the island's densely foliated mountain spine. Shiao Lin is on Taiwan's southwestern coast.

In rural Pingtung county, the rains turned rich swaths of farmland so sodden that it was difficult to distinguish them from the open sea. In the Pingtung community of Sandimen, troops maneuvered armored personnel carriers through flooded streets, plucking whole families from water-logged buildings and ferrying them to safety.

In Taitung, in the southeastern lowlands, a raging flood toppled a five-story hotel.

Anxious relatives in Taitung county begged President Ma Ying-jeou to help their loved ones.

"You must try to save my father," cried one. "Please, I beg you to save my father."

After pummeling Taiwan, Morakot slammed Sunday into China's Fujian province, directly across the strait, with heavy rain and winds of 74 miles per hour, according the China Meteorological Administration. Authorities evacuated 1.4 million people, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

The Chinese government used cell phones to send warnings - an estimated 8 million text messages telling people to flee to higher ground, reports CBS News correspondent Barry Petersen.

The heavy rains triggered a massive landslide in Pengxi, a town in Wenzhou city of eastern China's Zhejiang province, destroying seven three-story apartment buildings at the foot of a mountain late Monday, an official surnamed Chen from the Pengxi government told AP.

Xinhua reported an unknown number of residents were buried in the landslide but Chen said there were only six people there at the time and they were all pulled out alive, although two later died when emergency treatment failed. The rest were injured, one seriously, he said.

Chen said half of the buildings were left vacant after residents moved elsewhere for work.

Hundreds of villages and towns were flooded and more than 6,000 houses collapsed. Four people died in Zhejiang, and two other deaths were reported in Fujian and Jiangxi province, Xinhua said.

Before plowing into Taiwan, the storm hit the Philippines, where it killed 22.



© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by cranialnerves August 10, 2009 11:18 AM EDT
Not to get all Republican, but who give a crap about 600 *****?
Reply to this comment
by lloydbest1 August 10, 2009 4:31 PM EDT
Anyone with a relative in Taiwan want to answer that?
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