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About 700 people missing in southern Taiwan after Typhoon Morakot have been found alive, say army officials. People from several villages are said to have made it to higher ground before mud and rock engulfed their homes. Among the survivors found by rescue teams are 200 from Hsiaolin village, reports the Taiwan Central News Agency. Frantic rescue efforts have been ongoing in Hsiaolin and surrounding villages since the weekend to find hundreds of missing people. "We have found around 700 people alive in three villages last night and 26 more this morning. We are deploying 25 helicopters to evacuate them," said Maj Gen Richard Hu, a senior official in the rescue effort. Military helicopters have been ferrying villagers out of communities cut off by the storms and floods after roads and bridges were washed out. The typhoon struck Taiwan at the weekend, killing at least 60 people and causing the worst flooding in 50 years. 'Save my village' The BBC's Cindy Sui at Chishan in rural Taiwan, the centre of the rescue effort, says the authorities fear that hundreds more could still be trapped. In Hsiaolin alone, the residents of 100 households are unaccounted for and thought to be possibly buried. Our correspondent says family members from surrounding areas have been converging on Hsiaolin, demanding that helicopters be sent to their villages too. Some are carrying signs that read, "Save my village". The evacuations and the search for survivors has been a slow process as the only way in and out of the villages is by helicopter, our correspondent adds. The BBC's Alastair Leithead, also at the Chishan rescue base, says a high school playing field has become a landing pad for helicopters, and ambulances line the running track to ferry the injured to hospital. Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou is expected to visit the area soon to inspect the scale of the devastation and the rescue effort. Deadly path Morakot lashed Taiwan with at least two metres (80in) of rain over the weekend, catching the authorities off guard in a region used to typhoons. Typhoon Morakot has caused at least $225m (ÂŁ135m) in agricultural damage while nearly 30,000 houses were still without power and 750,000 homes without water, according to the latest estimates from officials. The storm also hit mainland China, where about 1.4 million people were evacuated from coastal areas, eight people died in flooding and up to 10,000 homes were destroyed. In the town of Pengxi in China's eastern province of Zhejiang, a landslide toppled seven older houses, killing two people. Meanwhile in Japan, another seasonal storm, Typhoon Etau, caused floods and landslides that have killed at least 15 people since the weekend and left a dozen missing. Around 1,000 people spent Tuesday night in shelters and 4,600 households were without water, officials said. Source: BBC

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.