The strongest earthquake in a quarter-century rocked Taiwan during the morning rush hour on April 3, killing nine people, stranding dozens of workers at quarries and sending some residents scrambling out of damaged buildings' windows.
During the earthquake and in its aftermath, major news organizations shared dramatic footage across social media.
One such dramatic video clip that’s been shared repeatedly shows several high-rise skyscrapers collapsing to the ground.
“Multiple buildings have collapsed after a Pair of Massive 7.5 Earthquakes Strikes Triggering Tsunami Warnings,” one post on X with tens of thousands of views says.
THE QUESTION
Does this video show skyscrapers collapsing during the April 2024 earthquake in Taiwan?
THE SOURCES
- Several videos showing the Aug. 27, 2021, demolition of 15 buildings in China’s Yunnan Province
- News coverage from the demolitions
- InVid and RevEye, footage forensics tools
THE ANSWER
No, this video doesn’t show skyscrapers collapsing during the April 2024 earthquake in Taiwan. The video shows the 2021 demolition of 15 buildings in China’s Yunnan Province.
WHAT WE FOUND
It is true that some buildings in Taiwan leaned at severe angles after their ground floors were crushed during the April 3 earthquake. But this video clip doesn’t show buildings collapsing anywhere in Taiwan.
The video is nearly three years old and shows the controlled demolition of 15 buildings in Kunming, which is the capital of China’s Yunnan Province.
Using InVid, a video forensics tool, VERIFY analyzed keyframes of the video and conducted a reverse image search of the frames. We were able to trace the video to this YouTube video that shows controlled demolition on Aug. 27, 2021.
In both videos, the buildings and surroundings are identical. At the 2:51-mark in the YouTube video from 2021, a rooftop court can be seen in the frame. The same court appears at the start of the clips that were shared after the Taiwan earthquake.
VERIFY also found several other videos posted on Aug. 27, 2021 showing different angles of the same buildings being demolished in the middle of Kunming.
Taiwan News reported that the demolished buildings were part of the Liyang Star City Phase II project, which sat unfinished for eight years.
The buildings were marked for demolition because the development could no longer meet market demand and because the buildings were neglected for so long that flooding had caused irreparable damage to the foundations of the buildings, Chinese news site Min News reported.
China’s Global Times also posted photos of the demolition in 2021.