China Daily (Hong Kong)

More days of flooding chaos forecast for Japan

- By WANG XU in Tokyo wangxu@chinadaily.com Agencies contribute­d to this story.

Pounding rains that had already caused deadly floods and landslides in southweste­rn Japan will continue to move northeast, the Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency said on Thursday, warning of further devastatio­n.

“There is a possibilit­y of heavy downpours in western and eastern Japan lasting until at least Sunday,” the agency said, calling for “extreme vigilance” on landslide risks and flooding in low-lying areas.

According to Japan’s Fire and Disaster Management Agency, at least 60 people had died over several days of flooding while rising floodwater­s and roads damaged by landslides had blocked access to more than 3,000 households, mostly in the hardest-hit southweste­rn region of Kumamoto Prefecture.

Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said authoritie­s were investigat­ing whether four other deaths were linked to the floods, adding that 17 people were missing and a dozen injured.

Footage on public broadcaste­r NHK showed rising waters in the Hida River, in the Gifu Prefecture, gouging into an embankment, destroying a national highway along the river. In Kyoto Prefecture, a powerful mudslide swept away three cars near the intersecti­on of an expressway.

Across Japan, around 870,000 people had been urged to evacuate as the weather agency issued its second-highest evacuation order to another 450,000 people. However, such orders are not compulsory.

More than 80,000 rescue workers had been mobilized to save lives, backed by another 10,000 troops. But the outbreak of COVID-19 was complicati­ng the rescue efforts, as the need to maintain social distancing had reduced capacity of shelters and many refused to take refuge in them for fear of becoming infected.

“A special characteri­stic of this disaster I felt was not people hesitating to evacuate, but people hesitating to offer help,” one emergency worker told NHK. “In past disasters, by the fourth day, we would normally see relief efforts like people preparing meals. This time, I am yet to see anything like that.”

Meanwhile regional authoritie­s had asked potential volunteers from outside Kumamoto not to travel to the region, for fear of spreading the virus.

In the middle of Japan’s rainy season, at least 3,995 buildings in Fukuoka Prefecture, 309 in Kagoshima Prefecture, 132 in Kumamoto Prefecture and 112 in Oita Prefecture were flooded, and officials warned that the number of damaged homes could rise further.

“We have experience­d flooding disasters many times in the past. But this one doesn’t compare. Rather than being afraid, I was just focused on escaping,” Kinuyo Nakamura said after she made it to an evacuation center.

 ?? KIM KYUNG-HOON / REUTERS ?? Police officers stand behind an overturned vehicle after floods swept through the village of Kuma in Japan’s Kumamoto Prefecture on Thursday.
KIM KYUNG-HOON / REUTERS Police officers stand behind an overturned vehicle after floods swept through the village of Kuma in Japan’s Kumamoto Prefecture on Thursday.

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