Business Day

Thousands of survivors left without water and electricit­y

- Chris Gallagher and Joseph Campbell

A week after an earthquake struck the west coast of Japan, thousands of people are still without water and electricit­y and have yet to be told when plans to rebuild can begin.

The magnitude 7.6 earthquake killed at least 168 people on New Year’s Day with 323 reported missing.

Sub-zero temperatur­es and heavy snow and rain have hampered the delivery of aid, leaving thousands with diminishin­g supplies and little informatio­n.

Mudslides, boulders and cracks in the road have buried homes and blocked access routes. Those living in areas that escaped the greatest damage, such as Nishiaraya, a village of 1,000 people on the outskirts of Kanazawa, brave the snow to collect drinking water.

RECONSTRUC­TION

“When will reconstruc­tion begin? When will temporary housing be built? We’re not getting any informatio­n,” Nishiaraya resident Hiroe Kawabe said.

“If we can’t live here we need to think about leaving. We want informatio­n on how long it will take,” Hiroe said.

Prime Minister Kishida Fumio said on Monday that 500 people could be temporaril­y housed in a sports centre in Kanazawa but said more evacuation centres were needed.

Kishida said the government was also working to find hotel rooms for evacuees.

On Friday, the prime minister’s office said that the government would tap ¥4.74bn ($32.77m) of budget reserves for reconstruc­tion efforts.

But the weather makes reconstruc­tion a dangerous task and more snow and rain are expected in coming days.

Nishiaraya fire department chief Hisashi Ida said the biggest risk was not being able to plough the snow. “Machines won’t be able to get in and walking on bumpy parts where snow has accumulate­d will cause injuries. I think this will be a ‘secondary disaster’ and I am worried,” Hisashi said.

Japan sits on the “Ring of Fire” arc of volcanoes and oceanic trenches that partly encircles the Pacific Basin.

It accounts for about 20% of the world’s earthquake­s of magnitude 6 or greater.

The New Year’s Day earthquake was Japan’s deadliest since 2016 when 276 people were killed in a quake that hit the southweste­rn region of Kumamoto.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Aftermath: People line up in Wajima, Japan, to collect water after the New Year’s Day earthquake.
/Reuters Aftermath: People line up in Wajima, Japan, to collect water after the New Year’s Day earthquake.

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