Houston Chronicle

5 years after tsunami, Japan resumes search

Coast guard responds to Facebook petition from families seeking remains of victims

- By Emily Wang

RIKUZENTAK­ATA, Japan — The Japanese coast guard resumed underwater searches this week for some of the more than 2,500 people missing from the 2011 earthquake and tsunami that devastated the country’s northeast coast.

Six divers entered Hirota Bay in near-freezing temperatur­es Thursday in a search that was resumed temporaril­y at the behest of surviving families in the city of Rikuzentak­ata.

As reconstruc­tion of the disaster-hit region gains pace, stretches of the bay have been reclaimed for building sea walls. Relatives fear the remains of their loved ones might be buried forever.

“Some people say to me, do you really want to latch on to this forever?” said Chikara Yoshida, 81, who lost his only son, a 43-year-old volunteer firefighte­r.

“But for me, as I approach the end of my life, I want to bring him back in any way I can.

“It doesn’t matter which piece of him comes back. Then I can end my days.”

Yoshida and his daughter led a petition drive through Facebook this year to resume underwater searches. The response was overwhelmi­ng. In just three weeks, 28,140 signed from Japan and abroad.

The coast guard heard about the petition and asked families in Rikuzentak­ata what it could do. They asked for searches in areas where divers have told them objects tend to accumulate, thinking these are where they might be fruitful.

The coast guard searched waters off Minamisanr­iku on Wednesday and plans to search another area off Rikuzentak­ata on Friday. So far, no remains have been found. A total of 2,561 people remain missing, according to the National Police Agency, including more than 200 in Rikuzentak­ata.

Nearly 16,000 have been confirmed dead, bringing the presumed death toll to more than 18,000.

The petition was submitted to Rikuzentak­ata officials in early March, in hopes local police would also resume searches.

After the disaster, Yoshida heard that his son Toshiyuki had gone to the municipal office immediatel­y after the magnitude-9.0 earthquake to help carry the elderly to higher ground, before the tsunami came.

He rescued two people and disappeare­d when he went back for a third.

Day after day for more than a year, Yoshida went from morgue to morgue looking for his son. Eventually, he filed a death certificat­e and held a funeral. With nothing to bury, he put a baseball inside the urn. Toshiyuki coached children in his favorite sport.

His absence haunts Yoshida. He wonders whether he is to blame for teaching his son to put the interests of others first.

If they could talk again, “I would just say, ‘well done’ or maybe ‘come back.’ But rather than come back, I would really just like to tell him, ‘Well done.’ ”

 ?? Toru Yamanaka / AFP Getty Images ?? Residents wander past debris on March 12, 2011, the day after a massive quake and tsunami hit Japan. As reconstruc­tion gains ground, families fear missing victims’ remains might be buried forever.
Toru Yamanaka / AFP Getty Images Residents wander past debris on March 12, 2011, the day after a massive quake and tsunami hit Japan. As reconstruc­tion gains ground, families fear missing victims’ remains might be buried forever.

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