The Independent

Dozens dead in Japan amid severe rainfall and flooding

- MATT MATHERS

Officials in Japan have advised millions of people to leave their homes amid severe flooding that has killed nearly 60 people so far. “Unpreceden­ted” rain that began over the weekend has caused rivers to burst their banks, mudslides and the destructio­n of homes and roads in what has been described as Japan’s worst natural disaster since Typhoon Hagibis killed 90 people in October last year.

Japan’s meteorolog­ical agency issued the highest level of alert for rain in more than 20 municipali­ties in the central regions of Gifu and Nagano yesterday, although this was later downgraded. More than 3 million people have been advised to evacuate across the country – 219,000 of those in Gifu prefecture alone, which

is about 250 miles west of Tokyo.

On Japan’s southwest island of Kyushu – where the rain first hit over the weekend – the death toll stands at 56, according to the Kyodo News agency.

Meanwhile, footage on the NHK TV network showed the Hida river in Gifa prefecture overflowin­g and destroying a national highway. In Gero, another central Japanese city, river water rose to just below a bridge. In the mountainou­s town of Takayama, several houses were hit by a mudslide, with uprooted trees and other debris scattered around. It was not immediatel­y known what happened to their residents.

Although the rains were causing fresh flooding threats in central Japan, flooding was still affecting the southern region. Search and rescue operations continued in the city of Kumamoto, on Kyushu, where 14 people are still missing.

Tens of thousands of military personnel, police officers and other rescue workers were mobilised from around the country to help, but rescue operations have been hampered by the conditions and disrupted communicat­ions. Torrential rain is expected to remain over a wide front “stretching from western to eastern Japan” until today, the chief cabinet secretary, Yoshihide Suga, said on Tuesday.

Japan is at high risk of heavy rain in early summer when wet and warm air from the East China Sea flows into a seasonal rain front above the country.

In July 2018, more than 200 people, about half of them in Hiroshima, died as a result of heavy rain and flooding in southwest Japan.

 ?? (EPA) ?? The devastatio­n in Hitoyoshi on the island of Kyushu
(EPA) The devastatio­n in Hitoyoshi on the island of Kyushu

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