Japan Earthquake: Death Toll Reaches 161, 100+ Still Missing
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Japan Earthquake: Death Toll Reaches 161, 100+ Still Missing

There have been thousands of rescuers called in from all around Japan, and the estimated 1,000 landslides and blocked highways caused difficulties for them in their work.

As snow impeded rescue efforts, the number of fatalities from Japan’s New Year’s Day earthquake increased to 161 from 128 overnight, according to authorities on Monday.

Authorities in the central Ishikawa region affected by the 7.5-magnitude earthquake said that the number of unaccounted-for individuals has decreased from 195 to 103.

Japan Earthquake

Buildings were toppled, a large fire was started, and tsunami waves more than a metre high were caused by the shock waves.

There have been thousands of rescuers called in from all around Japan, and the estimated 1,000 landslides and blocked highways caused difficulties for them in their work.

The area has been covered in snow for the past two days, which has made the job even more difficult.

In the hard-hit city of Suzu in the Noto Peninsula, a woman in her 90s defied the odds and lived under the debris of a collapsed house for five days before being rescued on Saturday.

Rescuers could be heard yelling to the woman, “Hang in there!” in police film from the rainy scene that local media released.

“You will be alright,” they exclaimed. “Stay positive!”

Not everyone was as fortunate. A 52-year-old father who had lost both his parents-in-law and his 21-year-old son in the town of Anamizu was waiting to learn about the whereabouts of his wife, his other three children, and more family members.

“I desire their survival. That I could be left alone is unimaginable,” he said to NHK.

For the more than 28,800 individuals residing in 404 government shelters, the winter weather is also expected to make things worse.

The regional government issued a warning that heavy snow could lead to more structures collapsing under the weight of their weight, and that continuous rain has increased the risk of new landslides.

In several of the isolated peninsula’s settlements, at least 2,000 people have been cut off by damaged roads, and some of the estimated 1,000 landslides are also impeding the passage of relief supplies.

This indicates that supplies of aid have not arrived quickly enough in areas experiencing power and water disruptions.

In the larger Ishikawa region, over 20,700 families did not have electricity on Sunday. Over 66,100 homes lacked access to water.

“Retrieving individuals buried beneath the debris and reaching remote communities have been the top priorities,” Prime Minister Fumio Kishida stated in a Sunday interview with NHK.

He claimed that the military has dispatched small contingents of soldiers on foot to each of the remote communities.

Additionally, according to Kishida, the government has “deployed various police and fire department helicopters” to reach them.

Japan has hundreds of earthquakes a year, most of which are benign due to stringent building regulations that have been in place for more than 40 years.

However, many buildings are older, particularly in rural places like Noto where aging populations are growing quickly.

The devastating 2011 earthquake that rocked the nation, killed about 18,500 people, caused a nuclear meltdown at the Fukushima facility, and set forth a tsunami that still unsettles the nation.

SOURCE: https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/japan-earthquake-death-count-climbs-to-161-over-100-still-missing-4820551

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