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Thursday, 9 December, 1999, 13:14 GMT
Cat survives Taiwan quake
cat recovering A large message board fell and pinned the creature to the ground


A cat has been found in the rubble of a house in Taiwan almost 80 days after the island was struck by a devastating earthquake.

Quake in Taiwan
Workers discovered the creature, pinned down by furniture, as they were preparing to demolish the vacated building.

The animal was barely breathing and severely dehydrated. It weighed less than 2kg, half the weight of a healthy cat its size, and was comatose with a failing liver when found.

It had apparently kept itself alive by eating another cat - a head, tail, bones and bits of fur were found next to the survivor.

collapsed building Thousands did not survive the devastating quake
A TV reporter rescued the cat from being thrown in the rubbish by the workers, and took it to a veterinary hospital in Taichung where it was placed in an incubator and fed via a syringe.

"It's already doing a lot better today, but we'll still consider it to be in critical condition through the week," veterinarian Chen Tao-chieh said.

It is not clear who owned the destroyed house, and no one has come forward to claim the cat.

Thousands killed

The September quake, which measured between 7.3 and 7.6 on the Richter scale, killed about 2,400 people and left thousands homeless.

Rescue workers found two brothers alive after five-and-a-half days in their collapsed Taipei apartment building. Two dogs were rescued by workers in Puli 18 days after the quake.

The survival time for people trapped under collapsed buildings varies greatly according to the time of year, terrain and any physical injuries.

One theory says those who are not rescued within 48 hours have a 10% chance of survival.

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See also:
24 Sep 99 |  Health
Surviving against the odds
24 Sep 99 |  Asia-Pacific
Boy rescued from Taiwan rubble
21 Sep 99 |  Sci/Tech
Earthquake 'unusual,' say scientists
23 Sep 99 |  Asia-Pacific
Picture gallery: Quake survivors pulled free
22 Sep 99 |  Asia-Pacific
Readers tell of their quake ordeals
09 Oct 99 |  Asia-Pacific
Shoddy builders face Taiwan crackdown

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