Bangkok Post

Japan digs for missing after Hagibis

Typhoon death toll rises to at least 43

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TOKYO: Tens of thousands of rescue workers in Japan battled to find survivors yesterday of a powerful typhoon that killed at least 43 people, as fresh rain threatened to hamper efforts.

Typhoon Hagibis crashed into the country on Saturday night, unleashing high winds and torrential rain across 36 of the country’s 47 prefecture­s, and triggering landslides and catastroph­ic flooding.

“Even now, many people are still unaccounte­d for in the disaster-hit area,” Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told an emergency disaster meeting yesterday.

“Units are trying their best to search for and rescue them, working day and night,” Mr Abe said.

But even as rescuers, including troops, combed through debris, the country’s weather agency forecast rain in central and eastern Japan that it warned could cause further flooding and new landslides.

“I would like to ask people to stay fully vigilant and continue watching for landslides and river flooding,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a news conference.

In Nagano, one of the worst-hit regions, the rain was already falling and was expected to intensify.

“We are concerned about the impact of the latest rain on rescue and recovery efforts,” local official Hiroki Yamaguchi said.

“We will continue operations while watching out for secondary disasters due to the current rain.”

By late yesterday afternoon, national broadcaste­r NHK said the toll had risen to 43 dead, with 16 others missing and over 200 people injured. The government gave lower figures but was continuing to update its informatio­n.

The dead included a municipal worker whose car was overcome by floodwater­s and at least seven crew from a cargo ship that sank in Tokyo Bay on Saturday night, a coast guard spokesman said.

Four others, from China, Myanmar and Vietnam, were rescued when the boat sank and the coast guard was still searching for the last crew member.

While Hagibis, one of the most powerful storms to hit the Tokyo area in decades, packed wind gusts of up to 216 kilometres per hour, it was the heavy rains that caused most damage.

A total of 142 rivers flooded, mainly in eastern and northern Japan, with river banks collapsing in two dozen places, local media said.

In central Nagano, a levee breach sent water from the Chikuma river gushing into residentia­l neighbourh­oods, flooding homes up to the second floor.

As the water slowly receded yesterday, television footage showed patients being transferre­d by ambulance from a Nagano hospital where some 200 people had been cut off by flooding.

Elsewhere, rescuers used helicopter­s to winch survivors from roofs and balconies or steered boats through muddy waters to reach those trapped.

By yesterday afternoon, some 75,900 households remained without power, with 120,000 experienci­ng water outages.

The disaster left tens of thousands of people in shelters, with many unsure when they would be able to return home.

“Everything from my house was washed away before my eyes, I wasn’t sure if it was a dream or real,” a woman in Nagano told NHK.

The storm brought travel chaos over the holiday weekend, grounding flights and halting commuter and bullet train services.

By yesterday, most subway trains had resumed service, along with bullet trains, and flights had also restarted.

The storm also brought havoc to the sporting world, forcing the delay of Japanese Grand Prix qualifiers and the cancellati­on of three Rugby World Cup matches.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Rescue workers transport a resident in the aftermath of Typhoon Hagibis, which caused severe floods, near the Chikuma River in Nagano Prefecture, Japan yesterday.
REUTERS Rescue workers transport a resident in the aftermath of Typhoon Hagibis, which caused severe floods, near the Chikuma River in Nagano Prefecture, Japan yesterday.

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