Taiwan leader says more than 500 dead in typhoon

TAIPEI, (Reuters) – Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou,  under mounting pressure over his government’s response to a  devastating typhoon, yesterday estimated that more than 500  people had died in flooding and mudslides.

Survivors and the main opposition party say efforts to  rescue people stranded in remote mountain villages have been  slow or insufficient, criticism that could hurt the image of  the president and his party ahead of year-end local elections.

Ma gave his estimate of the death toll, a jump from the  official count of 118, at a national security meeting, as local  officials estimated 200 to 300 had died in a mudslide that  levelled most of Hsiao Lin, a village in the south.

Typhoon Morakot struck Taiwan a week ago, but the scale of  the disaster only started to become clear this week after the  storm had weakened over neighbouring China.

Increased pressure on Ma, who was elected in 2008, could  drain support for his Nationalist Party (KMT) in city and  county elections in December, analysts say.
Some are also calling for Ma to reshuffle his cabinet and  may think long-term that he “doesn’t care”, said Hsu Yung-ming,  a political science professor at Soochow University in Taipei.

“The whole thing looks in disarray in the public’s  opinion,” said Alex Chiang, who teaches political science at  National Cheng Chi University in Taipei. “They were caught  off-guard.”

Officials say they could not have reacted faster because of  sustained rains in the disaster area, grounding rescue  helicopters.

“From a victim’s point of view, waiting just one minute is  too late,” Premier Liu Chao-shiuan told a news conference.

After days of dispatching helicopters to rescue survivors  and distribute emergency food in Hsiao Lin, authorities opened  a road into the stricken village on Thursday.

But it was unlikely that anyone trapped on Monday in the  landslide had survived, said local township chief Liu  Chien-fang.