Death toll hits 126 in Japan quake


Still stuck: Vehicles passing along a newly-paved road next to a car which remains trapped in the old pavement in the city of Anamizu, Ishikawa prefecture. — AFP

Rescuers and residents sifted through rubble as their focus turned to recovering bodies and cleaning up rather than finding survivors, five days after a huge earthquake struck central Japan and killed at least 126 people.

The death toll from the New Year’s Day 7.5-magnitude quake in the Ishikawa region of Japan’s main Honshu island was certain to rise, with 210 people still unaccounted for, authorities said.

The work of thousands of rescue workers has been hampered by bad weather – with snow forecast for today – and roads torn apart by gaping cracks and blocked by an estimated 1,000 landslides.

Two elderly women were pulled from the wreckage of their homes on Thursday in the badly-hit city of Wajima on the Noto peninsula, but there has been no reason for cheer since.

In Suzu, where dozens of homes lie in ruins, a dog barked while an AFP team filmed the clean-up operation on Friday, the signal of a grim discovery.

“Training for disaster rescue dogs begins with something similar to a game of hide-and-seek,” canine trainer Masayo Kikuchi said.

“Finally they are trained to bark when seeing a person under the rubble.”

Houses containing any fatalities that are discovered are being marked and left alone until a coroner can come with relatives to identify the body.

Fishing boats were sunk or lifted like toys onto the shore by tsunami waves that also reportedly swept one person away.

The coastal community of Shiromaru, which was hit by a tsunami several metres high on Jan 1, was a tangled mess of wooden, metal and plastic debris.

“The tsunami came from the cove of Shiromaru through the river and then ran up through the street,” said Toshio Sakashita, one of its roughly 100 residents.

“We have received no public support here. Look, the main street is still blocked due to the rubble, which has been left untouched,” the 69-year-old said.

“We cannot live in our house anymore,” Yukio Teraoka, 82, said as he and his wife shovelled heavy, sodden sand brought by the waves out of their wrecked home.

Local authorities said yesterday that 126 people were confirmed dead.

Canine help: A police officer with a police dog conducting a search operation at a collapsed house in Suzu,  Ishikawa prefecture. — APCanine help: A police officer with a police dog conducting a search operation at a collapsed house in Suzu, Ishikawa prefecture. — AP

“We sincerely pray for the repose of the souls of those who have passed away,” Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said on social media.

In an emergency response meeting, he told ministers to “urgently and swiftly” repair roads to help hundreds of people in cut-off areas.

Despite frosty ties with Japan, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un sent a message of “deep sympathy and condolences”, state news agency KCNA reported, echoing the United States, China and other countries.

Around 23,200 households were without electricity in Ishikawa and more than 66,400 were without running water.

Power and water outages have also affected hospitals and facilities for taking care of elderly and disabled people.

“We are facing extremely severe situations due to the water outage,” Ishikawa governor Hiroshi Hase said during a disaster management meeting.

Restoration of running water will take a long time “as many water pipes have cracks”, he said.

More than 30,000 people were in 366 government shelters.

Japan experiences hundreds of earthquakes every year and most cause no damage, with strict building codes in place for more than four decades.

But many buildings are older.

The country is haunted by the monster quake of 2011 that triggered a tsunami, left around 18,500 people dead or missing, and caused a nuclear catastrophe at the Fukushima plant. — AFP

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