<p>A strong earthquake struck southeastern Taiwan on Sunday, killing at least one person, bringing down a handful of buildings and tearing up roads -- but forecasters said the threat of a regional tsunami had passed.</p>.<p>The quake hit at 2:44 pm (0644 GMT) about 50 kilometres (30 miles) north of the city of Taitung at a depth of 10 kilometres, the United States Geological Survey said.</p>.<p>Its initial strength was given as magnitude 7.2 but the USGS later downgraded it to 6.9. Multiple aftershocks were recorded.</p>.<p>Japan's Meteorological Agency and the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued tsunami advisories shortly after the quake, but both later said there was no longer a threat of high waves.</p>.<p>Taiwan's National Fire Agency said one person was killed by falling machinery at a cement factory in the town of Yuli, which lay close to the epicentre.</p>.<p>The health ministry said 79 people either sought medical treatment or were sent to hospital.</p>.<p>At least three buildings collapsed in Yuli, including one that had a 7-Eleven convenience store on the ground floor.</p>.<p>Video footage posted by Taiwan's Central News Agency showed panicked residents running towards the building, which sent up a thick cloud of dust as it caved in.</p>.<p>The Hualien fire department said four people who were trapped in the building were rescued.</p>.<p>Two other buildings in the town collapsed but no one was inside them, the department added. Two nearby bridges collapsed and two others were damaged.</p>.<p>The Taiwan Railways Administration (TRA) said a train derailed at Dongli station in Hualien after it was hit by concrete from an overhead canopy that came loose during the quake.</p>.<p>TRA said the 20 passengers on board were evacuated and no injuries were reported.</p>.<p>Shaking was also felt in the capital Taipei and the southwestern city of Kaohsiung, with residents posting videos of chandeliers and paintings swaying on social media.</p>.<p>Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen urged people to be vigilant for further aftershocks.</p>.<p>"Water and electricity supplies in some areas are also affected by the earthquake," she wrote on Facebook. "The related disaster relief work is in full swing."</p>.<p>Many expressed the kind of resilience that comes with living on an island that frequently experiences earthquakes.</p>.<p>In one video posted online, a man said he was trapped on a bridge where the road at either end had collapsed into a twisted mess of tarmac and concrete.</p>.<p>"This is troublesome," he could be heard saying. "The whole bridge is broken".</p>.<p>Ou Chin Te shared footage from the swimming pool on the 60th floor of The One -- a skyscraper in Kaohsiung and Taiwan's fourth-highest building.</p>.<p>The tremors had turned the pool into a wobbly mass of waves.</p>.<p>"When the quake struck the lifeguard shouted to get out and we all left the pool," he told AFP.</p>.<p>"Everyone was really scared. I was so frightened at the moment that I didn't really know what to do."</p>.<p>A 6.6-magnitude quake hit the same region on Saturday and there have been multiple tremors since, with minimal damage in what is a mountainous and sparsely populated rural region.</p>.<p>But Sunday's quake was stronger.</p>.<p>The China Earthquake Network Centre said tremors were felt in coastal areas including Fujian, Guangdong, Jiangsu and Shanghai.</p>.<p>Taiwan sits on the "Ring of Fire", an arc of intense seismic activity that stretches through Southeast Asia and across the Pacific basin.</p>.<p>Most of Taiwan's population lives on the flat western coast and in the capital Taipei.</p>.<p>The scenic eastern coast is more remote and less populated but a major tourist draw.</p>.<p>There are few international tourists in Taiwan these days because the island maintains mandatory Covid quarantine for most arrivals.</p>.<p>Taiwan is regularly hit by quakes and most cause minimal damage but the island also has a long history of deadly tremors.</p>.<p>Hualien, a tourist hotspot, was struck by a 6.4-magnitude earthquake in 2018 that killed 17 people and injured nearly 300.</p>.<p>In September 1999, a 7.6-magnitude quake killed around 2,400 people in the deadliest natural disaster in the island's history.</p>
<p>A strong earthquake struck southeastern Taiwan on Sunday, killing at least one person, bringing down a handful of buildings and tearing up roads -- but forecasters said the threat of a regional tsunami had passed.</p>.<p>The quake hit at 2:44 pm (0644 GMT) about 50 kilometres (30 miles) north of the city of Taitung at a depth of 10 kilometres, the United States Geological Survey said.</p>.<p>Its initial strength was given as magnitude 7.2 but the USGS later downgraded it to 6.9. Multiple aftershocks were recorded.</p>.<p>Japan's Meteorological Agency and the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued tsunami advisories shortly after the quake, but both later said there was no longer a threat of high waves.</p>.<p>Taiwan's National Fire Agency said one person was killed by falling machinery at a cement factory in the town of Yuli, which lay close to the epicentre.</p>.<p>The health ministry said 79 people either sought medical treatment or were sent to hospital.</p>.<p>At least three buildings collapsed in Yuli, including one that had a 7-Eleven convenience store on the ground floor.</p>.<p>Video footage posted by Taiwan's Central News Agency showed panicked residents running towards the building, which sent up a thick cloud of dust as it caved in.</p>.<p>The Hualien fire department said four people who were trapped in the building were rescued.</p>.<p>Two other buildings in the town collapsed but no one was inside them, the department added. Two nearby bridges collapsed and two others were damaged.</p>.<p>The Taiwan Railways Administration (TRA) said a train derailed at Dongli station in Hualien after it was hit by concrete from an overhead canopy that came loose during the quake.</p>.<p>TRA said the 20 passengers on board were evacuated and no injuries were reported.</p>.<p>Shaking was also felt in the capital Taipei and the southwestern city of Kaohsiung, with residents posting videos of chandeliers and paintings swaying on social media.</p>.<p>Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen urged people to be vigilant for further aftershocks.</p>.<p>"Water and electricity supplies in some areas are also affected by the earthquake," she wrote on Facebook. "The related disaster relief work is in full swing."</p>.<p>Many expressed the kind of resilience that comes with living on an island that frequently experiences earthquakes.</p>.<p>In one video posted online, a man said he was trapped on a bridge where the road at either end had collapsed into a twisted mess of tarmac and concrete.</p>.<p>"This is troublesome," he could be heard saying. "The whole bridge is broken".</p>.<p>Ou Chin Te shared footage from the swimming pool on the 60th floor of The One -- a skyscraper in Kaohsiung and Taiwan's fourth-highest building.</p>.<p>The tremors had turned the pool into a wobbly mass of waves.</p>.<p>"When the quake struck the lifeguard shouted to get out and we all left the pool," he told AFP.</p>.<p>"Everyone was really scared. I was so frightened at the moment that I didn't really know what to do."</p>.<p>A 6.6-magnitude quake hit the same region on Saturday and there have been multiple tremors since, with minimal damage in what is a mountainous and sparsely populated rural region.</p>.<p>But Sunday's quake was stronger.</p>.<p>The China Earthquake Network Centre said tremors were felt in coastal areas including Fujian, Guangdong, Jiangsu and Shanghai.</p>.<p>Taiwan sits on the "Ring of Fire", an arc of intense seismic activity that stretches through Southeast Asia and across the Pacific basin.</p>.<p>Most of Taiwan's population lives on the flat western coast and in the capital Taipei.</p>.<p>The scenic eastern coast is more remote and less populated but a major tourist draw.</p>.<p>There are few international tourists in Taiwan these days because the island maintains mandatory Covid quarantine for most arrivals.</p>.<p>Taiwan is regularly hit by quakes and most cause minimal damage but the island also has a long history of deadly tremors.</p>.<p>Hualien, a tourist hotspot, was struck by a 6.4-magnitude earthquake in 2018 that killed 17 people and injured nearly 300.</p>.<p>In September 1999, a 7.6-magnitude quake killed around 2,400 people in the deadliest natural disaster in the island's history.</p>