Sabtu, 03 April 2021

Taiwan train accident: Prosecutors seek arrest warrant for suspect as island mourns victims - The Straits Times

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2021-04-03 07:31:46Z
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Rebel group says more than 12000 displaced by Myanmar junta air strikes - CNA

YANGON: A rebel group has accused Myanmar's military of deploying "excessive force", saying on Saturday (Apr 3) that continuous air strikes have displaced more than 12,000 unarmed civilians, including children.

Late last month, the ethnic armed group Karen National Union (KNU) seized a military base in eastern Kayin state, killing 10 army officers. The junta retaliated with air strikes.

The KNU has been a vocal opponent of the military junta - which ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi from power two months ago - and said it is sheltering hundreds of anti-coup activists.

On Saturday, the KNU condemned the use of "excessive force by engaging in non-stop bombing and air strikes" from Mar 27  to Mar 30, which have "caused the deaths of many people including children".

"The air strikes have also led to the further displacement of more than 12,000 people who have fled their villages and caused a major humanitarian crisis."

Junta spokesman Zaw Min Tun said the military has only been targeting KNU's 5th Brigade - which led the seizure of the military base and killed officers.

READ: As ethnic armies unite against coup, war returns to Myanmar's borderlands

"We had an air strike on that day only," he told AFP.

"We have signed a nationwide ceasefire agreement ... If they follow the NCA, there is no reason for conflict to happen," Zaw Min Tun said.

Ethnic Karen local media and rights groups have reported multiple bombings and air strikes across the state over recent days.

About 3,000 people fled to neighbouring Thailand on Monday, crossing the Salween River to seek shelter. But most returned to Myanmar by Wednesday, which Thailand claimed was "voluntary".

Myanmar has been in turmoil since the military seized power on Feb 1, triggering a massive uprising across the country with protesters demanding the restoration of the elected government.

Information flow in the country has also been throttled, with the junta cutting wifi services, mobile data and imposing a nightly Internet blackout that has gone on for nearly 50 days.

READ: Myanmar's junta cracks down on online critics, death toll edges up to 550

READ: More Myanmar violence reported as activists seek help from ethnic groups

Myanmar's border regions are largely controlled by various ethnic armed groups that have long agitated for greater autonomy.

Territory in the northern Kachin state - held by the Kachin Independence Army - has also seen a recent step-up in military activity.

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2021-04-03 05:48:41Z
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Five killed in Myanmar protests as junta cracks down on online critics - CNA

Myanmar security forces opened fire on protests on Saturday (Apr 3) killing five people, a protester and media said, as the military reinforced its bid to end dissent with arrest warrants for online critics and Internet blocks.

Despite the killing of more than 550 people by the security forces since the Feb 1 coup, protesters are coming out every day, often in smaller groups in smaller towns, to voice opposition to the reimposition of military rule.

Security forces in the central town of Monywa fired on a crowd killing thee people, the Myanmar Now news service said, while one man was shot and killed in another central town, Bago, and one in Thaton to the south, the Bago Weekly Journal online news portal reported.

"They started firing non-stop with both stun grenade and live rounds," the protester in Monywa, who asked not to be named, told Reuters via a messaging app. "People backed off and quickly put up ... barriers, but a bullet hit a person in front of me in the head. He died on the spot."

Police and a spokesman for the junta did not answer telephone calls seeking comment.

READ: Myanmar protesters vow to keep up action as Internet blackout widens

The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners activist group said earlier on Saturday the security forces had killed 550 people, 46 of them children, since the military overthrew an elected government led by Aung San Suu Kyi.

The demonstrations that drew tens of thousands of people in the early days of defiance in big cities have largely stopped with opponents of the coup adopting "guerrilla rallies" - small, quick shows of defiance before security forces can respond.

People also gather at night for candle-lit vigils.

The authorities are waging a campaign to control information. They had shut down mobile data and on Friday ordered Internet providers to cut wireless broadband, depriving most customers of access, though some messages and pictures were still being posted and shared on social media.

Authorities also issued warrants for 18 show business celebrities, including social media influencers, and two journalists under a law against material intended to cause a member of the armed forces to mutiny or disregard their duty, state media reported late on Friday.

Myanmar
Anti-coup demonstrators prepare to confront police during a protest in Tarmwe township, Yangon, Myanmar, on Apr 1, 2021. (Photo: AP)

All of them are known to oppose military rule. The charge can carry a prison term of three years.

Actress Paing Phyoe Thu said she would not be cowed.

"Whether a warrant has been issued or not, as long as I'm alive I'll oppose the military dictatorship who are bullying and killing people. The revolution must prevail," she said on Facebook.

READ: How protesters in Myanmar get around social media and Internet blackouts

READ: Myanmar junta slammed for child deaths amid anti-coup protests

Paing Phyoe Thu regularly attended rallies in the main city of Yangon in the weeks after the coup. Her whereabouts were not immediately known.

SILENCING THE VOICES?

State broadcaster MRTV announced the warrants for the 18 with screenshots and links to their Facebook profiles.

While the military has banned platforms like Facebook, it has continued to use social media to track critics and promote its message.

MRTV maintains a YouTube channel and shares links to its broadcasts on Twitter, both of which are officially banned.

The United States condemned the Internet shutdown.

"We hope this won’t silence the voices of the people," State Department spokeswoman Jalina Porter told a briefing.

Man flashes three-finger salute next to burning tires during a protest against the military coup, i
A man flashes the three-finger salute as he passes burning tires during a protest against the military coup, in Mandalay, Myanmar Apr 1, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Stringer)

READ: As ethnic armies unite against coup, war returns to Myanmar's borderlands

The coup has rekindled old wars with autonomy-seeking ethnic minority forces in the north and the east.

Myanmar's oldest insurgent group, the Karen National Union (KNU), has seen the first military air strikes on its forces in more than 20 years, after it announced its support for the pro-democracy movement.

The KNU said more than 12,000 villagers had fled their homes because of the air strikes. It called for an international embargo on arms sales to the military.

"Their inhuman actions against unarmed civilians have caused the death of many people including children and students," the group said in a statement.

READ: Rebel group says more than 12,000 displaced by Myanmar junta air strikes

Media has reported that about 20 people were killed in air strikes in KNU territory in recent days, including nearly a dozen at a gold mine run by the group.

The KNU signed a ceasefire with the government in 2012 to end their 60-year insurgency.

Fighting has also flared in the north between the army and ethnic Kachin insurgents. The turmoil has sent several thousand refugees fleeing into Thailand and India. 

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2021-04-03 05:37:30Z
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Jumat, 02 April 2021

Vaccinating Asia: How does world's largest continent immunise 4.5 billion people in shortest time possible? - The Straits Times

It is a critical issue as the world rushes to achieve herd immunity against the coronavirus.

How does the largest continent in the world immunise 4.5 billion people in the shortest time possible? The Straits Times bureaus find out in this special report.

Grappling with myriad challenges on path towards Covid-19 immunity

Vaccinating the world against Covid-19 was never going to be an easy task to begin with.

But with many countries rolling out vaccination drives, the full scale of the difficulties in getting the job done has become increasingly apparent.

Countries that spent most of last year ramping up production capacity in preparation for the Covid-19 vaccines are still falling far short of meeting the massive demand.

READ MORE HERE


Midwives and soldiers in Indonesia mobilised to support country's inoculation drive

For nearly three months now, Indonesian midwife Resti Damanik has had a second job: Giving people Covid-19 jabs.

Stationed at one of the community health clinics in capital city Jakarta, the 52-year-old carefully fills syringes with the Chinese-made Sinovac vaccine and calmly injects health workers and the elderly - the priority recipients in the country.

Calming frayed nerves is hard; some patients scream and turn hysterical, she says. Casual chats and drinks usually do the trick.

READ MORE HERE


Millions of undocumented migrants in Malaysia keen on Covid-19 jab but wary of arrest

Millions of migrant workers in Malaysia - most of them undocumented - are keen to take the Covid-19 vaccine that the government has offered for free, but are seeking stronger guarantees that they will not be arrested when they turn up for vaccination.

Estimated to number around three million, or nearly 10 per cent of the country's population of 33 million, undocumented migrants account for 30 per cent to 50 per cent of Covid-19 cases reported daily.

Hence they pose the biggest challenge for the Malaysian government to meet its goal of vaccinating at least 80 per cent of all residents by the end of this year.

READ MORE HERE


Filipinos in search of coveted 'Covid-19 passport'

Ms Sheila Reyes, 38, had been working in Singapore for 12 years when she was let go.

When the Covid-19 pandemic began to cut deep into Singapore's leisure industry, Ms Reyes, who was a guest relations executive at Resorts World Sentosa, and about 2,000 others from the hotel were laid off last August.

Lacking options, she went back to the Philippines. Seven months later, she is still trying to land a job abroad.

READ MORE HERE


India's greatest challenge lies in vaccinating rural villages

As Mr Shankarappa D, 61, helped his mother through the corridor of a primary health centre (PHC) in Guddahatti village in the South Indian state of Karnataka, the 80-year-old held her walking stick so tightly her knuckles went pale.

"She's scared the injection will hurt," Mr Shankarappa told the nurse in Kannada.

Throughout the 30 seconds it took for her to get the Covid-19 vaccine, his mother Goyamma chanted: "Aiyayyo, aiyayyo," in anticipation of the pain.

READ MORE HERE


Quality and quantity of Covid-19 vaccines in China hamper inoculation drive

In mid-January, waiter Zhang Jixin was among tens of thousands of essential workers in Beijing who were offered the first dose of China's first publicly available Covid-19 vaccine.

Within days, he and about a dozen co-workers at a hotpot restaurant received their first of two injections from local drug maker Sinopharm.

"We were told at the time that getting the jab was completely voluntary," Mr Zhang, 29, told The Straits Times. "But if we didn't get it, that might affect our ability to continue serving members of the public."

READ MORE HERE


Hong Kong's Covid-19 vaccination drive zips ahead despite woes

Hong Kong has pushed for vaccinating all healthy adults quickly.

As pressure mounted on officials to restart the economy, the five-week-old islandwide vaccination programme that was rolled out to priority groups first - the sick and the elderly - was quickly expanded to those aged 30 to 59 to attain herd immunity fast.

Now, the government is thinking of extending it to those aged 16 to 29 too.

READ MORE HERE


South Korean govt draws flak for not mandating Covid-19 vaccine holiday after roll-out delay

Get inoculated against the coronavirus and claim up to two days of "vaccine holiday" to recover from side effects such as fever and muscle pain.

This was the plan announced by the South Korean government to encourage more working adults to take the shot after the vaccination programme was expanded to the public on Thursday.

However, the holiday plan is already drawing flak for merely being a "recommendation", and not mandatory.

READ MORE HERE


Separated couple in South Korea inoculated ahead of wedding

Singaporean Stephanie Chan and her South Korean fiance Kim Min-cheol have been separated for more than 400 days.

They were in the midst of planning their wedding, as well as Ms Chan's relocation to South Korea, when the Covid-19 pandemic struck.

"We were supposed to tie the knot last May, but because of strict border restrictions, our wedding plans burst like a bubble," Mr Kim, 35, told The Straits Times.

READ MORE HERE


Japan's chequered past with vaccines raises fresh fears

Just over six in 10 Japanese have told media polls that they want to be vaccinated against Covid-19, which doctors fear will not be enough to give the country herd immunity.

One reason for this dismal figure, Japanese Society of Vaccinology director Toshihiro Tanaka told The Straits Times, is hesitancy due to primal fears over a new product, exacerbated by Japan's chequered past with vaccines.

In 1989, Japan introduced a vaccine against mumps, measles and rubella, but this was discontinued four years later after reports of adverse side effects in one out of 1,200 cases. The government, sued by victims, lost the case.

READ MORE HERE


No rush for Covid-19 jab in Taiwan, given fears over side effects

Taiwan kicked off its Covid-19 vaccination programme on March 22, but the roll-out has been slow, with only 10,891 people receiving their first shots by Tuesday (March 30), the majority of them front-line medical workers.

Next in line are medical staff who are not manning Covid-19 wards and are on the front line. They can get vaccinated from April 6.

The first batch of 117,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, known as AZ here, were imported as the island is still conducting human trials on a domestically produced one.

READ MORE HERE


Religious, community groups, experts clear doubts about Covid-19 jabs in Singapore

With Covid-19 vaccinations in full throttle in Singapore, 943,000 residents have already received at least one of their two shots.

The number is set to rise with the announcement last week that those between ages 45 and 59 can now register for their turn.

Even before the national exercise kicked off late last year, a Straits Times poll found that a majority - eight in 10 - said "yes" to getting inoculated.

READ MORE HERE


Church webinar in S'pore convinces senior to take Covid-19 jab

Last month, Madam Mah Koon Sin, 66, got her first Covid-19 jab. She will receive her second shot soon.

But the retired bank employee was not always convinced she should get the vaccine.

When Singapore began ramping up vaccination efforts earlier this year, she had some doubts.

READ MORE HERE


Tapping TikTok videos and social media influencers to spread information on vaccines in Singapore

As Singapore ramps up its nationwide vaccination drive, an all-out information and outreach effort is under way to encourage residents here to get vaccinated against Covid-19.

In the past few months, celebrities, social media influencers, private companies and grassroots volunteers have been roped in to spread the word on the vaccines, in person at coffee shops or house visits, or via online channels such as Facebook and even TikTok.

These include efforts to explain the science behind the vaccines, assisting people with registering for a jab and addressing concerns or dispelling misinformation about the vaccine.

READ MORE HERE


MCI officers create skits, dances on TikTok to debunk Covid-19 myths

In February, the Gov.sg TikTok channel, set up in April last year, posted a video in response to a comment from a TikTok user who claimed that 29 elderly people had died in Norway because of side effects from the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

The short video, set to catchy background music, says the World Health Organisation and the Norwegian authorities have found no evidence that this was the case.

It also includes screenshots from official sources, which say that a high proportion of nursing home residents in Norway who received jabs during the first round of vaccinations were very frail or terminally ill patients.

READ MORE HERE


Foodcourt chat to allay fears about Covid-19 shots among Singaporeans

It was an early Sunday morning at a foodcourt in Punggol, but Dr Noel Yeo, chief operating officer of IHH Healthcare Singapore, was already fielding questions from residents about Covid-19 vaccinations.

The one-hour "talk show" at Punggol Plaza hosted by an MP for Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC, Ms Yeo Wan Ling, is an outreach initiative to spread the word about the vaccines.

"We have activated our grassroots leaders as well as community partners from the local temples, churches and mosques to visit door to door our residents and help seniors who have been invited to the vaccinations to book their vaccination timing with us on the spot," she told The Straits Times.

READ MORE HERE

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2021-04-02 21:30:00Z
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Taiwan train accident: At least 50 killed, flags to be flown at half-mast from Saturday - The Straits Times

TAIPEI - Flags in Taiwan will be lowered to half-mast for three days, starting on Saturday (April 3), to mourn the people who were killed when an express train derailed in a tunnel on Friday morning after hitting a truck that had slid down a bank onto the track.

At least 50 on board the train were killed - the youngest was six years old - and more than 140 injured in the island's worst rail disaster.

The 408 Taroko Express, carrying four crew members and 492 passengers, was travelling from Taipei to Taitung, where most of its passengers hail from. Many were heading home at the start of the Qing Ming Festival to tend to family graves. One French citizen was among the dead, officials said.

The eight-carriage train derailed just after entering a tunnel in Hualien County. The Taiwan Railways Administration (TRA) said the train hit a construction vehicle that had slipped onto the tracks at the tunnel's mouth.

Friday's accident was the deadliest railway accident in Taiwan since the TRA introduced the Tze-chiang limited express, its fastest train category, in 1978. The Taroko Express is a newer model of the Tze-chiang trains.

The crash left four carriages a twisted wreck.

According to the National Fire Agency, some passengers' bodies were not in one piece when the rescuers arrived, which caused confusion when updating the death toll.

The train's operator Yuan Chun-hsiu was also pronounced dead. The 33-year-old Taichung native's death left his family and colleagues in shock.

"I hope he didn't suffer any pain," said his mother to Taichung Mayor Lu Shiow-yen, who visited the Yuan family after the news of the operator's death.

Mr Yuan, the youngest child of the family, is survived by his mother, three sisters and wife.

The TRA has organised an emergency response team to handle the accident.

The driver of the truck has been taken to a Hualien police station for questioning, said Hualien County Police Bureau chief Tsai Ting-hsien on Friday afternoon.

The truck's handbrake was allegedly not engaged properly, the authorities said. The TRA is planning to demand compensation from the company that owns the truck.

"Who knew the truck would just slide down to the tracks 28 minutes later?" said an employee surnamed Chang.

Though allegedly caused by the truck, Friday's crash has sparked anew longstanding questions about rail safety in Taiwan.


Rescuers work at the site of the train that derailed after colliding with a railway maintenance vehicle (top yellow) which slipped down an embankment above the tracks in the mountains of Hualien, eastern Taiwan. PHOTO: AFP


A general view shows a section of a train that derailed inside a tunnel in the mountains of Hualien, eastern Taiwan. PHOTO: AFP


Rescuers work at the site of the deadly train derailment in a tunnel north of Hualien, Taiwan. PHOTO: REUTERS

Upon seeing the twisted train in the tunnel, a Red Cross rescuer leading a team of 11 rescuers described the site as a "living hell". Ambulances were dispatched from Hualien, Yilan and New Taipei City to help the passengers.

The death toll rose as more were pulled from the twisted train carriages, while those uninjured opened exits on the train's top and hopped down with the help of fire fighters. All survivors were helped out of the wreckage before 7pm.

The TRA said it may take a week for the site to be fully restored.

The Taroko Express is one of the local trains that allow passengers to purchase standing tickets, and the 408 train was a packed train with many passengers standing. They were tossed about by the crash impact.

The Taiwan Transportation Safety Board is conducting an investigation into the accident, but it may take between three and six months for a conclusion to surface.

"It could be that the handbrake of the truck wasn't engaged, or that the handbrake had malfunctioned," said Yang Hung-chih, who is heading the investigation.

Friday's accident reminded many of the last serious train accident that happened in October 2018, when a Puyuma train derailed in Yilan, just north of Hualien. The Puyuma accident caused 18 deaths, and over 200 people were injured.

The injured on Friday were sent to at least six hospitals near the crash site.

President Tsai Ing-wen is scheduled to visit the injured in Hualien's hospitals on Saturday morning, and has expressed her sorrow over the loss of so many people.

"It's regrettable that an accident happened on the first day of holidays, leading to heavy casualties," she said at a briefing in Taipei on Friday, vowing to conduct a thorough investigation into the cause of the collision.

China's Cabinet-level Taiwan Affairs Office (TAO) sent its condolences on Friday evening.

"The mainland is highly concerned about the rescue progress," said Mr Ma Xiaoguang, a spokesman for the TAO.

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2021-04-02 18:00:00Z
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'Mangled bodies everywhere': Taiwan train survivors recount harrowing crash - The Straits Times

The train was plunged into darkness, but Ms Wu could still make out other passengers falling on top of one another. There were bodies everywhere, some of them children. "It felt like hell," she recalled.

At least 50 people have died, with the youngest only six years old, after the Taroko Express derailed in a tunnel on Friday (April 2) in Taiwan's worst rail disaster in almost four decades.

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2021-04-02 12:53:02Z
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Taiwan train derails in tunnel: At least 48 killed in one of island's worst rail tragedies in 40 years - The Straits Times

TAIPEI (REUTERS, BLOOMBERG, XINHUA) - A Taiwan express train with almost 500 aboard derailed in a tunnel on Friday (April 2) morning, killing at least 48 passengers and injuring dozens in one of the island's worst rail tragedies in 40 years.

The train had apparently hit a truck that slid off a nearby road leading to a construction site.

The Taroko Express was travelling from Taipei to the southeastern city of Taitung when it derailed north of Hualien around 9.30am local time, said the National Fire Agency.

The train, which has eight coaches, was carrying many tourists and people heading home to be with family at the start of a four-day long weekend amid the Qing Ming tomb-sweeping holiday.

Transportation and Communications Minister Lin Chia-lung told reporters at the accident scene that the train was carrying about 490 people – higher than an earlier figure of 350 given by the fire agency.

Taiwan media said that many people were standing as the train was full, and they were thrown about when it crashed, and showed pictures of survivors being led out the tunnel.

"People just fell all over each other, on top of one another,” one female survivor told local television. “It was terrifying. There were whole families there.”

Images of the crash scene showed carriages inside the tunnel ripped apart from the impact, while others crumpled, hindering rescuers reaching passengers, though, as at mid-afternoon, only two people remained trapped in the wreckage.

The 33-year-old train driver was killed in the derailment, United Daily News reported. His assistant, aged 32, also died in the crash.

The official Central News Agency said a truck whose handbrake was not engaged was suspected of sliding off a sloping road into the path of the train. The police had taken the driver in for questioning, the news agency said.

The fire agency showed a picture of what appeared to be the truck’s wreckage lying next to the derailed train and an aerial image of one end of the train sitting on the track next to a construction site.

“Our train crashed into a truck,” one man said in a video aired on Taiwanese television, showing pictures of the wreckage. “The truck came falling down.”

Part of the train was outside the tunnel and passengers in carriages still in the tunnel had to be led to safety, Taiwan Railways Administration said.

The train was plunged into darkness after it derailed and many passengers lost their sense of direction, EBC News reported. Some of them did not know what to do immediately after the crash while others tried to escape via the roof of the train.

Passengers told EBC News that the train braked several times just before the derailment. On impact, it shook violent and many people were thrown forward.

Images showed an injured passenger being stretchered out of the crash scene, her head and neck in a brace. Passengers were also seen gathering suitcases and bags in a tilted, derailed carriage while others walked out of the tunnel on the roof of the train.

Rescuers found 81 people who were seriously or slightly injured and sent them to several hospitals for treatment, according to Taiwan Railways Administration.


Passengers in carriages still in the tunnel had to be led to safety. PHOTOS: EPA-EFE/TAIWAN NATIONAL FIRE AGENCY, AFP/TAIWAN RED CROSS


Passengers walking out of the tunnel on the roof of the train. PHOTO: AFP/TAIWAN RED CROSS

President Tsai Ing-wen has ordered the relevant departments to offer their best rescue efforts, and instructed the transportation ministry as well as Taiwan Railways Administration to deal with impacted traffic arrangements, Presidential Office spokesman Chang Tun-han said in text message.

“It’s regrettable that an accident happened on the first day of holidays, leading to heavy casualties. I share the sorrow with fellow countrymen,” said Ms Tsai.

Taiwan last saw a major train derailment in October 2018, when the Puyuma Express came off the rails in eastern Yilan country, killing 18 and injuring almost 200.

In a statement, Transport Minister Lin said the railway administration had implemented more than 100 items of reform since the Puyuma accident. But they are obviously not enough, he added.

“I will surely shoulder all political responsibility," Mr Lin said.

The American Institute of Taiwan, which handles US ties with the island, expressed its "deepest condolences to the victims, families, and communities impacted by today’s tragic train derailment".

It said on Facebook: "We wish the people of Taiwan peace and comfort during this difficult time."

A Chinese mainland spokesman on Friday expressed condolences and sympathy to the casualties. “The mainland is highly concerned about the rescue progress,” said Mr Ma Xiaoguang, a spokesman for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council.

Taiwan’s mountainous east coast is a popular tourist destination.

The railway that snakes down from Taipei hugs the coast and is known for its tunnels, in one of which the crash took place. The link to Taipei opened in 1979.

Taiwan’s state-owned railways are generally reliable and efficient, but have had a patchy safety record over the years.

In 1981, 30 were killed in a collision in northern Taiwan, and in 1991 another 30 died in a train crash.

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2021-04-02 10:11:48Z
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