Kuwait Times

Villages wait for help as Japanese quake toll tops 100

-

Twenty-five minutes after the New Year’s Day earthquake, a tsunami several meters high barreled into Shiromaru, leaving a trail of destructio­n for the Japanese coastal community’s mostly elderly residents. One person died but the roughly 100 inhabitant­s like Yukio Teraoka and his wife — well drilled in what to do in seismic hot-spot Japan — dashed out of their houses and fled to higher ground in time.

“We cannot live in our house anymore,” Teraoka, 82, told AFP as he and his wife shoveled the heavy, sodden sand brought by the waves out of their wrecked home. “There is 30 kilograms (65 pounds) of rice stored in this,” said his wife, in red rubber gloves, woolly hat and face mask, pointing to a hefty steel container the size of a refrigerat­or that rolled on the ground. “But it’s all waste now after being soaked in sea water.”

Elsewhere in the village, one of several that dot the small coves of the Noto peninsula hit by the 7.5-magnitude quake, a tangled mass of wooden, metal and plastic debris litters the streets. The detritus includes furniture, mattresses, shoes and, by one mangled metal fence, a forlorn and soggy Snoopy stuffed toy, even though like many villages in ageing Japan, Shiromaru has zero children of elementary school age. The death toll from the quake and its aftermath on Saturday reached 126, with 210 still unaccounte­d for. More than 30,000 people are in government shelters. Buffeted by the salty seaside wind, only a few people were cleaning up in Shiromaru on Friday four days on from the disaster, with little help from the overstretc­hed authoritie­s.

“I don’t think we have received substantia­l supplies or food,” Takushi Sakashita, 59, who lives nearby, told AFP. He said he has refrained from taking food rations at a nearby shelter so they would go to people more in need. “I myself try not to move around to save petrol, because fuel stations are not working and there is a serious lack of fuel,” he said.

Shiromaru at least remains reachable along the main road. Many other communitie­s are still cut off, with an estimated 1,000 landslides having made many roads impassable. Tens of thousands of people were without power or running water.

 ?? ?? SHIROMARU: People walk past debris on a road in Shiromaru, Ishikawa prefecture on January 5, 2024, nearly a week after a major 7.5 magnitude earthquake struck the region. — AFP
SHIROMARU: People walk past debris on a road in Shiromaru, Ishikawa prefecture on January 5, 2024, nearly a week after a major 7.5 magnitude earthquake struck the region. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait