Shanghai Daily

Heatwave blankets Japan as 14 people die

- (Reuters)

AN intense heatwave killed at least 14 people over a threeday long weekend in Japan, media reported yesterday, and high temperatur­es hampered recovery in flood-hit areas where more than 200 people died last week.

Temperatur­es on Monday, a national holiday, surged above 39 degrees Celsius in some inland areas and combined with high humidity to produce dangerous conditions, the Japanese Meteorolog­ical Agency said.

At least 14 people died from the heat over the long weekend, media reports said, including a woman in her 90s who was found unconsciou­s in a field. Thousands more were treated in hospitals.

The heat was most intense in landlocked areas such as Gifu prefecture, where it soared to 39.3 degrees in the town of Ibigawa on Monday — the hottest in the nation.

Temperatur­es in parts of western Japan hit by deadly floods reached a high of 34.3 degrees by midday yesterday, creating dangerous conditions for military personnel and volunteers clearing mud and debris.

“It’s really hot. All we can do is keep drinking water,” one man in Okayama told NHK television.

Temperatur­es of 35 or above — known in Japanese as “intensely hot days” — were recorded at 200 locations around Japan on Sunday, the JMA said, which is unusual for July but not unpreceden­ted.

Similar scorching temperatur­es were reported from 213 locations on a July day in 2014.

Last year, 48 people died from heat between May and September, with 31 deaths in July, according to the Fire and Disaster Management Agency.

The current heatwave was due to the layering of two high pressure systems over much of Japan and is expected to continue for the rest of the week if not longer, the JMA said.

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