Taiwan seeks foreign aid after typhoon catastrophe

August 15, 2009

Taiwan leaders, already under fire over the response to a typhoon that likely killed hundreds, have accepted foreign aid after earlier refusing the offers, officials said on Saturday, as the president apologized.

Trying to repair its image after Typhoon Morakot caused widespread landslides in southern Taiwan, the government on Friday asked major world donors for equipment, a foreign ministry official said. Aid offers were initially refused on Tuesday.

“In our first message, we said we didn’t need help, just money,” said Joanne Ou, head of the ministry’s publicity section. “But on (Thursday) the ministry asked the disaster center what we needed. We asked them for a list.”

Local media, reflecting public sentiment, bashed the government for declining aid earlier in the week.

The ministry has approached Japan, the United States and European countries for supplies such as large helicopters and mobile homes, Ou said.

Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou, pressured by the public over his response to the typhoon damage, on Friday estimated the eventual death toll at more than 500, mostly people feared buried in a massive landslide in one mountain village.

COULD DRAIN SUPPORT

Survivors and Taiwan’s main opposition party have accused Ma of responding too slowly to the typhoon that hit last weekend, the island’s worst since 1959. The official death toll is 123.

Ma, touring a disaster area in central Taiwan, apologized on Saturday.

“Ma said the government response was a bit slow and expressed apologies for that,” his spokesman Tony Wang said.

Sustained 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.

The foreign aid snafu pointed to poor communication between government offices and may be remembered, said Alexander Huang, strategic studies professor at Tamkang University in Taipei.

Taiwan seeks foreign aid after typhoon catastrophe

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