The Citizen (Gauteng)

More rain impedes progress

TYPHOON HAGIBIS: RESCUE EFFORTS CONTINUE INTO THE NIGHT AS DEATH TOLL KEEPS RISING

- Tokyo

Officials working cautiously as they are concerned about impact of latest rain.

Tens of thousands of rescuers worked into the night to find survivors of a powerful typhoon in Japan that killed at least 56 people, as fresh rain threatened to hamper their efforts.

Typhoon Hagibis crashed into the country on Saturday night, unleashing high winds and torrential rain across 36 of the country’s 47 prefecture­s, triggering landslides and catastroph­ic flooding.

The death toll from the disaster has risen steadily, with national broadcaste­r NHK saying last night that 56 people had been killed and 15 were still missing.

It cited its own tally based on local reporting. The government has given lower numbers but was still updating its informatio­n.

“Even now, many people are still unaccounte­d for in the disaster-hit area,” Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told an emergency disaster meeting yesterday.

“Units are trying their best to search for and rescue them, working day and night.”

Later in the day, he pledged to “do whatever the country can” for victims and survivors, ordering the defence ministry to call up to 1 000 reserve troops to join 31 000 active forces in search operations.

But rescue work that was continuing into the night risked being hampered by additional rain falling in central and eastern Japan that officials warned could cause fresh flooding and landslides.

“I would like to ask people to stay fully vigilant and continue watching for landslides and river flooding,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a news conference.

In Nagano, one of the worst-hit regions, officials said they were working cautiously. “We are concerned about the impact of the latest rain on rescue and recovery efforts,” local official Hiroki Yamaguchi told AFP.

“We will continue operations while watching out for secondary disasters due to the current rain.”

The death toll continued to rise into last night, with bodies pulled from flooded cars and homes, swollen rivers and landslides.

The casualties included a municipal worker whose car was overcome by floodwater­s and at least seven crew from a cargo ship that sank in Tokyo Bay on Saturday night, a coast guard spokesman said.

Four others, from China, Myanmar and Vietnam, were rescued when the boat sank and the coast guard was still searching for a last crew member.

Hagibis packed wind gusts of up to 216km/h, but it was the heavy rains that caused the most damage.

A total of 176 rivers flooded – mainly in eastern and northern Japan – with their banks collapsing in two dozen places, local media said.

In central Nagano, a levee breach sent water from the Chikuma river gushing into residentia­l neighbourh­oods, flooding homes up to the second floor.

Television footage from the area showed patients being transferre­d by ambulance from a Nagano hospital where some 200 people had been cut off by flooding.

Elsewhere, some of the 110 000 rescuers used helicopter­s to winch survivors from roofs and balconies. By last night, some 75 900 households remained without power, with water cut off to about 135 000 homes.

The disaster left tens of thousands of people in shelters. –

 ?? Picture: EPA-EFE ?? DEVASTATED. A man assesses the damage following typhoon Hagibis in Nagano, Japan, yesterday. According to media reports, by last night at least 56 people had died since the typhoon made landfall.
Picture: EPA-EFE DEVASTATED. A man assesses the damage following typhoon Hagibis in Nagano, Japan, yesterday. According to media reports, by last night at least 56 people had died since the typhoon made landfall.

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