San Francisco Chronicle

Avalanche hits student groups, killing at least 8

- By Jonathan Soble Jonathan Soble is a New York Times writer.

TOKYO — Seven teenagers and an instructor from a high school mountainee­ring club died in an avalanche Monday in an area of northeaste­rn Japan that had been blanketed by unusually heavy spring snows, authoritie­s said.

The students were training about 100 miles north of Tokyo, in an area where the weather bureau had issued an avalanche warning urging caution a day earlier. Dozens of other students and teachers were injured.

“Suddenly everything turned white,” a student who was caught by the cascade of snow said in a telephone interview with NHK, the Japanese national broadcaste­r.

“The teacher at the front yelled, ‘Get down,’ so we dropped down and got covered in snow,” said the student, who was not identified. “Then those of us who could move helped dig out people who were buried.”

About 60 students from seven high schools in rural Tochigi Prefecture were participat­ing in the annual earlysprin­g climb. The area has been in the grip of snowstorms strong enough that rescue helicopter­s initially had trouble reaching the avalanche zone, according to Japanese news reports.

Television footage showed rows of ambulances and other emergency vehicles waiting in the still-falling snow as crews worked to find and rescue survivors. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe spoke of the disaster in parliament, saying officials were “making every effort to respond.”

After several hours, rescuers began bringing down the bodies of the dead, covered in blue tarps.

The branch of the Tochigi government responsibl­e for dealing with natural disasters identified most of the victims as boys from Otawara High School. It said they had been found “without vital signs,” a phrase commonly used by Japanese officials before families are notified and formal death certificat­es are issued.

Otawara has one of the top school mountainee­ring clubs in the nation, having won the Tochigi prefectura­l title for competitiv­e climbing eight years running, according to its website. Survivors said members of the Otawara club were leading several groups of students during a trekking exercise on a low-altitude slope when the avalanche struck.

About 40 participan­ts suffered injuries, all but two of them minor, authoritie­s said.

The students and their teachers may have thought they were playing it safe. Officials from the Tochigi board of education said at a news conference that the group of seven schools had originally planned to climb to the top of Mount Chausu, a 6,300-foot peak, to cap a three-day training program that began on Saturday.

The group had been camping at a ski resort near the mountain’s base, the officials said, learning lessons on how to climb in the snow, including how to avoid avalanches.

 ?? Jiji Press / AFP / Getty Images ?? Emergency workers carry a survivor from the site of an avalanche in Tochigi prefecture about 100 miles north of Tokyo. An avalanche warning had been issued a day before the slide.
Jiji Press / AFP / Getty Images Emergency workers carry a survivor from the site of an avalanche in Tochigi prefecture about 100 miles north of Tokyo. An avalanche warning had been issued a day before the slide.

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