Bangkok Post

Abe pays visit to rain-hit Kumamoto

- KYODO

TOKYO: Prime Minister Shinzo Abe visited the southweste­rn Japan prefecture of Kumamoto yesterday to assess the damage inflicted by deadly torrential rain and flooding in the area earlier this month.

During his first tour of the devastatio­n, Mr Abe visited the Senjuen nursing home where 14 residents died after the Kuma River flooded, and offered prayers for the victims.

In the village of Kuma, he met with Kumamoto Gov Ikuo Kabashima, whose prefecture has seen 64 people killed in the disaster that struck a wide area of the Kyushu region.

“Under the policy of doing all we can, we will make utmost efforts to achieve early recovery,” Mr Abe told the governor. Mr Kabashima called for more help from the government.

During a press conference in the prefecture, Mr Abe said he would instruct officials to set aside a budget of over 400 billion yen (117.2 billion baht) including reserve funds for reconstruc­tion work, and that the government would assist in securing emergency housing and helping small businesses in the affected regions.

After returning to the capital in the evening, Mr Abe planned to issue instructio­ns on reconstruc­tion work in the disaster-hit area at a government task force meeting.

Ryota Takeda, minister for disaster management, accompanie­d the prime minister in touring Kuma and the city of Hitoyoshi, among the municipali­ties hardest hit by the disaster.

The widespread rain caused overflows of 105 rivers in 14 of the country’s 47 prefecture­s and a total of 316 mudslides in 27 prefecture­s, the land ministry said yesterday.

By prefecture, Kumamoto was hit by the highest number of landslides with 56, followed by Kagoshima with 44, Nagano with 27, and Nagasaki with 24, according to the Land, Infrastruc­ture, Transport and Tourism Ministry.

Yesterday morning, elementary and junior high schools reopened in Hitoyoshi after a week-long shutdown.

All of about 2,500 students of nine elementary and junior high schools in the city have been confirmed safe, with some of them currently staying in evacuation sites outside the city of the prefecture.

The city government is providing textbooks and other school necessitie­s for students who have lost their bags and other belongings in the disaster.

“I’m still a little nervous, but excited to see my friends,” said Ryoma Yamamoto, an 11-year-old fifth-grader who resumed classes yesterday.

Meanwhile, three elementary and junior high schools in Kuma will remain closed until July 31, while a total of five schools in the town of Ashikita and the city of Yatsushiro are expected to be shut for the time being due to severe damage in the municipali­ties, according to the prefectura­l board of education.

 ?? AFP ?? Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, right, speaks with residents as he visits a flood-hit area in the village of Kuma in Kumamoto prefecture yesterday.
AFP Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, right, speaks with residents as he visits a flood-hit area in the village of Kuma in Kumamoto prefecture yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand