Eleven Quake-stranded Taiwan
Tourists Rescued
Source: Xinhua
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Eleven
of the 14 elderly Taiwan tourists, who
had been stuck in Qipangou Village close
to the epicenter of Wenchuan County after
the Monday magnitude 8 earthquake, had
arrived at a military airport in Chengdu
at Sunday noon aboard a helicopter.(Xinhua
Photo)
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The remaining three people of the 14 stranded
Taiwan tourists in quake-hit Sichuan were expected
to arrive at the provincial capital of Chengdu
on Monday.
Eleven of the 14 elderly Taiwan tourists,
who had been stuck in Qipangou Village close
to the epicenter of Wenchuan County after the
Monday magnitude 8 earthquake, had arrived at
a military airport in Chengdu at Sunday noon
aboard a helicopter.
The helicopter flew to the village twice in
the afternoon but the remaining three tourists
did not show up at the appointed time. Considering
the critically injured people aboard, the helicopter
had to fly back to Chengdu immediately, said
Lin Ping, an official with the Taiwan affairs
office of Sichuan.
"We are still in talks with the concerned
authority. A helicopter is expected to be sent
there."
The group sought shelter in the village after
the quake but lost contact with their tour agencies.
Villagers and the local government had taken
good care of all the tourists, with an average
age of 65, providing food and accommodation,
said rescuers.
An official with the Taiwan tourist association
said all the 14would stay in Chengdu for a couple
of days under medical observation before returning
to Taiwan.
They would be sent to a local hospital if
necessary, the official said.
Two helicopters took off Saturday noon from
Chengdu to transport the tourists after their
location was discovered. But bad weather forced
the pilots to call off the mission.
The group, with a Taiwan-based travel agency
named "Auspicious Crane", arrived
in Chengdu on May 9 and was traveling from Maoxian
county to Wenchuan when the devastating quake
took place on Monday.
They were reported as the last group of tourists
outside the Chinese mainland still stranded
in the quake-hit area, according to China National
Tourism Administration.
Some 700 other Taiwanese, stranded in Chengdu
and Chongqing Municipality since the quake,
returned to the island Friday and Saturday on
four chartered flights.
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