• yesterday
As roads are cleared and power restored, some communities are still cut off and in need of supplies in the wake of Typhoon Kong-rey. Amid efforts to clear roadways, aid packages are being airlifted to stranded villagers.

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00A stretch of mountain highway reopens after days of work to clear up mud, boulders and
00:04fallen trees.
00:06Typhoon Kongrei hit Taiwan's mountains hard, with driving rain triggering landslides that
00:10buried roads.
00:12But bit by bit, work crews have dug their way through the muck and rubble on blocked
00:16sections like this.
00:17After testing the road this morning, we confirmed that the road is safe, and from 3 p.m. today
00:22to 12 p.m., we will start to open the road.
00:25Slowly, electricity is coming back to the mountains, too, as crews repair storm damage.
00:30Still, as late as Sunday, over 1,000 households in the rugged heart of the island were still
00:35without power, and officials say there's a lot of work to be done.
00:50But in some places, recovery is still a long way off.
00:54In the mountains of eastern Taiwan's Hualien County, around 50 people are still cut off,
00:58with the only road in or out blocked by rockslides.
01:01Clearing this road is expected to be challenging, and officials aren't giving an estimate of
01:05how long it could take.
01:07On Sunday, helicopters airdropped 720 kilograms of basic supplies to stranded residents.
01:20Not all stranded people have been so lucky.
01:22The indigenous village of Smangus in the north is also cut off by landslides.
01:26And here, heavy fog has forced helicopters to turn back, their aid undelivered.
01:31A new attempt is slated for Monday, as food and medicine could soon run short for the
01:35150 residents.
01:37For communities like this, the scars of Typhoon Kongrei will last long after the weather is cleared.
01:43Klein Wong and John Van Triest for Taiwan Plus.

Recommended