Live · Global · Independent
Live Feeds
PinkVilla
Forbes
NDTV
Hindustan Times
Kejriwal must stay CM, run govt from jail, party MLAs tell Sunita
onmynews.com

Kejriwal must stay CM, run govt from jail, party MLAs tell Sunita

AAP MLAs met her at the CM’s residence hours before she was to speak to him via video conferencing. He was sent to Tihar Jail on Monday, in judicial custody, for 15 days. “All MLAs requested her to give the message to Kejriwal that he was, is and will always be Delhi CM as 2 crore people were standing with him,” minister Saurabh Bharadwaj said.

Read full article
7.4 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Taiwan, Tsunami Warning Issued
onmynews.com

7.4 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Taiwan, Tsunami Warning Issued

A major earthquake hit Taiwan’s east shortly before 8:00 am (0000 GMT) local time Wednesday, prompting tsunami warnings for the self-ruled island as well as parts of southern Japan.

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) said the quake had a magnitude of 7.4, with its epicentre 18 kilometres (11 miles) south of Taiwan’s Hualien City at a depth of 34.8 km.

Japan’s Meteorological Agency put the magnitude at 7.5.

Tsunami waves as high as three metres (10 feet) were expected immediately for remote Japanese islands in the region, including Miyakojima island, the agency said.

“Evacuate!” said a banner on Japanese national broadcaster NHK.

“Tsunami is coming. Please evacuate immediately,” an anchor on NHK said. “Do not stop. Do not go back.”

The director of Taipei’s Seismology Centre called the earthquake “the strongest in 25 years”.

“The earthquake is close to land and it’s shallow. It’s felt all over Taiwan and offshore islands… it’s the strongest in 25 years since the (1999) earthquake,” Wu Chien-fu told reporters, referring to a September 1999 quake with 7.6-magnitude that killed 2,400 people.  

Live TV footage from the Okinawa region’s ports, including Naha, showed vessels heading out to sea, possibly in efforts to protect their ships.

Taiwan is regularly hit by earthquakes because the island lies near the junction of two tectonic plates.

A 7.6-magnitude jolt hit Taiwan in September 1999, killing around 2,400 people in the deadliest natural disaster in the island’s history.

Japan experiences around 1,500 jolts every year.

The vast majority are mild, although the damage they cause varies according to the depth of the epicentre below the Earth’s surface and its location.

The severity of tsunamis — vast and potentially destructive series of waves that can move at hundreds of miles (kilometres) per hour — also depends upon multiple factors.

Even larger quakes usually cause little damage in Japan and Taiwan thanks to special construction techniques and strict building regulations.

Japan has also developed sophisticated procedures and technology to alert and evacuate people when needed.

Japan’s biggest earthquake on record was a massive 9.0-magnitude undersea jolt in March 2011 off Japan’s northeast coast, which triggered a tsunami that left around 18,500 people dead or missing.

The 2011 catastrophe also sent three reactors into meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant, causing Japan’s worst post-war disaster and the most serious nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

The total cost was estimated at 16.9 trillion yen ($112 billion), not including for the hazardous decommissioning of the Fukushima facility, which is expected to take decades.

Despite stricter building guidelines, many structures, particularly outside major cities, but not only there, are old and vulnerable.

This was brought home in the 7.5-magnitude New Year’s Day quake in 2024, which hit Noto Peninsula and killed more than 230 people, many of them when older buildings collapsed.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Read full article
Strong earthquake in 25 years rocks Taiwan: Latest developments
onmynews.com

Strong earthquake in 25 years rocks Taiwan: Latest developments

An earthquake offshore Taiwan with a magnitude of 7.2 rocked the capital Taipei on Wednesday morning, knocking out power in several parts of the city and sparking a tsunami warning for the islands of southern Japan and the Philippines. Taiwan television stations showed footage of some collapsed buildings in the eastern county of Hualien, near the quake’s epicentre, and media reported some people were trapped.

Read full article
Link copied!