Image used for representational purpose only. (Photo | AP) 
World

6.2 magnitude earthquake shakes Taiwan's east coast

Taiwan sits directly on a fault line as part of the Ring of Fire, a region in the Pacific Ocean that is seismologically active.

Associated Press

TAIPEI: A 6.2 magnitude earthquake originating in the waters off Taiwan's eastern coast shook the island Wednesday, but no injuries or major damage were immediately reported.

The earthquake struck 29 kilometres (18 miles) southeast of Hualien, a city on Taiwan's east coast, the island’s Central Weather Bureau said. The depth was 5.7 kilometres (3.5 miles).

Buildings in the capital, Taipei, shook for about a minute and the subway briefly paused operations to ensure passenger safety.

Taiwan sits directly on a fault line as part of the Ring of Fire, a region in the Pacific Ocean that is seismologically active.

In September, a magnitude 6.8 quake hit the island's southeastern coast, toppling a building and killing one person.

NTA declares NEET-UG 2026 results; over 11.2 lakh qualify, 58% of them women

Monsoon Session: NDA to chalk out strategy amid fresh push for Delimitation Bill

First murder conviction in the 2020 northeast Delhi riots

Bankipur bypoll: BJP's organisational might meets Prashant Kishor's popularity

Trump's new US visa rules limit foreign students to four-year stay, tighten curbs on journalists

SCROLL FOR NEXT