Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Strong quake in Japan kills 4, hurts hundreds, sparks fires

- By Mari Yamaguchi and Ken Mortitsugu Associated Press

TOKYO — Residents in western Japan were cleaning up debris Monday evening after a powerful earthquake hit the area around Osaka, the country’s second-largest city, killing four people and injuring hundreds while knocking over walls and setting off fires.

The magnitude 6.1 earthquake that struck the area early Monday damaged buildings and left many homes without water or gas. The quake also grounded flights in and out of Osaka and paralyzed traffic and commuter trains most of the day.

By evening, bullet trains and some local trains had resumed operation, and stations were swollen with commuters trying to get home, many of them waiting in long lines. An exodus of commuters who chose to walk home filled sidewalks and bridges.

Some commuters took refuge in nearby shelters. NHK public television showed dozens of men wearing ties and carrying briefcases sitting on gym mats at a junior high school gymnasium in Ibaraki city, where some families also gathered.

Takatsuki city confirmed another victim late Monday, as the death toll rose to four. Kyodo News reported that an 81-year-old woman was found dead underneath a wardrobe that fell on her at her home in Takatsuki.

Also in Takatsuki, a concrete wall at an elementary school fell onto the street, killing 9-year-old Rina Miyake as she walked to the school. NHK showed the collapsed upper half of the high wall, which was painted cheerfully with flowers, trees and blue sky and surrounded the school swimming pool.

Mayor Takeshi Hamada apologized for her death. The city acknowledg­ed that the wall did not meet building safety codes. The structure was old and made of concrete blocks — a known risk in earthquake­s. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga ordered the Education Ministry to conduct nationwide safety checks of concrete block structures at public schools.

A man in his 80s died in the collapse of a concrete wall in Osaka city. An 85year-old man in nearby Ibaraki died after a bookcase fell on top of him, according to the disaster management agency.

The Fire and Disaster Management Agency said 307 people were treated for injuries at hospitals.

Dozens of domestic flights in and out of Osaka were grounded, while train and subway service in the Osaka area, including bullet trains, was suspended to check for damage.

Some subway service in the afternoon.

Some manufactur­ers, including automakers Daihatsu Motor Co. and Honda Motor Co., electronic­s makers Panasonic and Sharp Corp., and confection­ers Ezaki Glico Co. and Meiji Co., temporaril­y stopped production lines at their factories in the region for safety checks, news reports said. resumed

 ?? GETTY-AFP ?? People pause to look at a collapsed house Monday after an earthquake in Ibaraki, Japan.
GETTY-AFP People pause to look at a collapsed house Monday after an earthquake in Ibaraki, Japan.

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