Rescue efforts ,
Tainan. The
Ministry of the Interior immediately set up the
Central Emergency Operation Center (CEOC) shortly after 4 a.m. once the earthquake had occurred. From the CEOC,
President Ma Ying-jeou coordinated the rescue efforts and is expected to head to Tainan.
Tainan Mayor William Lai also set up emergency response minutes after the quake.
Premier Chang San-cheng has cancelled his original itinerary and is expected to head to Tainan as well. The
Ministry of Health and Welfare had launched six regional emergency operation centers. The last survivors, a woman and her niece, were found 60 hours after the earthquake.
Ministry of National Defense confirmed that
army units were dispatched for the rescue efforts consisting of 810 personnel, 11 medical teams, 24 search and rescue teams and 38 vehicles. A total of 1,200 beds in four locations were prepared by the military for people who lost their homes due to the earthquake.
Tainan Air Force Base had been turned into a temporary shelter that could accommodate up to 1,400 people left homeless by the quake. Rescuers used sensors to detect signs of life and avoided using heavy machinery for fear of further collapsing the rubble and potentially trapping any survivors. On 13 February 2016, Tainan Mayor
William Lai declared the search and rescue mission for the earthquake victims was over.
Reactions Taipei 101 put on a lighting display on Saturday night to pay tribute to the earthquake victims. Tennis athletes
Chan Yung-jan and
Chan Hao-ching dedicated their
Fed Cup Asia/
Oceania Group I victory to the earthquake victims. During her visit to Tainan,
President-elect
Tsai Ing-wen said that safety checks of old buildings and urban renewal will be the top priority of her administration, later stating that Taiwan has become a developed society that demands improved public infrastructure and better quality of life. When meeting with the quake victims treated at hospital, Tsai promised that rescue efforts will continue and that rescue teams will not give up hope.
Donations To assist with post-earthquake relief and reconstruction efforts, Japan donated US$1 million, United States pledged US$500,000, and China donated 2 million yuan (approx. USD).
Tsai Ing-wen donated NT$1 million to the earthquake relief efforts.
New Taipei Mayor Eric Chu also donated NT$1 million to earthquake victims.
Changhua County Magistrate Wei Ming-ku donated one month of his salary to the earthquake victims.
Foxconn and Yunglin Healthcare Foundation donated NT$100 million each.
Buddhist Compassion Relief Tzu Chi Foundation sent more than 1,000 volunteers to 15 locations in Tainan with blankets, winter bedding, clothes and food for the earthquake survivors.
Taiwan's Red Cross Society mobilized more than 100 employees and volunteers to help with the relief efforts, while the
Red Cross Society of China and Macau Red Cross have pledged US$303,030 and US$50,000 respectively. In addition, some Taiwanese and foreign celebrities, like
Jay Chou or
Huang Xiaoming, donated to the relief efforts. Hotels around Tainan provided temporary free rooms for earthquake survivors to stay in. == Aftermath ==