Taiwan hit by new series of strong earthquakes

This picture released by Taiwan’s Central News Agency on April 23, 2024, shows the Full Hotel building in Hualien, which had been previously damaged in the April 3 earthquake, tilting further to one side after a series of earthquakes overnight.

Taiwan was hit by a series of strong earthquakes over several hours between Monday evening and Tuesday morning, nearly three weeks after at least 17 people were killed by a powerful magnitude 7.4 quake.

The first quake was a magnitude 5.5 detected Monday evening in the eastern county of Hualien, the epicenter of the April 3 quake, followed by a series of smaller tremors.

The strongest quake hit several hours later, which Taipei’s Central Weather Administration’s seismology center measured as magnitude 6.3, coming several minutes after a magnitude 6.0 quake. Authorities in Hualien county say two buildings that sustained serious damage in the April 3 quake partially collapsed after the Tuesday morning quakes.

The Central Weather Administration’s seismology center says the quakes were aftershocks of the April 3 disaster. No casualties were reported from the new quakes. Schools and offices in Hualien were ordered closed Tuesday.

The April 3 quake was the most powerful to hit Taiwan since a magnitude 7.7 earthquake 25 years ago, that killed 2,400 people and destroyed or damaged thousands of buildings.

Some information for this report came from The Associated Press, Reuters, Agence France-Presse.