The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Japan typhoon death toll climbs to 74

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The government will stand united to tackle the issue of supporting victims, so that they will be able to return to normal life as quickly as possible.

Shinzo Abe

Japan’s government said yesterday it would set aside millions of dollars to help areas devastated by Typhoon Hagibis, which killed more than 70 people across the country.

Hagibis slammed into Japan on Saturday, unleashing fierce winds and unpreceden­ted rain that triggered landslides and caused dozens of rivers to burst their banks.

By midday yesterday, the government put the toll at 74, with more a dozen people still missing.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said his government would offer 710 million yen (US$6.5 million) to help areas affected by the storm.

The money will come from some a 500 billion yen emergency reserve, he said.

Tokyo will also fast-track the disburseme­nt of subsidies to more than 300 disaster-hit municipali­ties.

“The government will stand united to tackle the issue of supporting victims, so that they will be able to return to normal life as quickly as possible,” Abe said.

As of yesterday morning, more than 10,000 households were still suffering from electricit­y blackouts, while more than 110,000 households are without running water, top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told reporters.

“Today, too, rescue workers are making their utmost efforts in search and rescue work,” he said.

“Due to the heavy rains we’ve experience­d, the level of water is rising in rivers and there are spots where the ground is getting muddy.”

“We call on people to keep vigilant about landslides and floods,” he added.

Television footage showed devastated residents returning to homes filled with brown mud, and rescuers searching a hillside for a family missing after a landslide.

The country’s northeast was particular­ly hard hit by the typhoon – with a death toll of 26 in Fukushima prefecture, the highest among the 36 of Japan’s 47 prefecture­s that were affected. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Residents walk past damaged homes and debris littering the area near where a river burst its banks in Nagano, after Typhoon Hagibis hit Japan unleashing high winds, torrential rain and triggered landslides and catastroph­ic flooding.
— AFP photo Residents walk past damaged homes and debris littering the area near where a river burst its banks in Nagano, after Typhoon Hagibis hit Japan unleashing high winds, torrential rain and triggered landslides and catastroph­ic flooding.

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