Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ The death toll in a Japan earthquake rose to 30, but most power and flights are restored.

Others still missing as rescue effort continues

- By Haruka Nuga

SAPPORO, Japan — Japanese rescue workers and troops searched Saturday for the missing for a third straight day in a northern hamlet buried by landslides from a powerful earthquake. Power was restored to most households and internatio­nal flights resumed to the main airport serving the Hokkaido region.

The Hokkaido government said Saturday that 37 people are dead or presumed dead and two remain missing. All but three of the victims are in the town of Atsuma, where landslides crushed and buried houses at the foot of steep forested hills that overlook rice fields.

Toyota Motor Corp. announced that it would suspend nearly all its production in Japan on Monday. Toyota makes transmissi­ons and other parts in Hokkaido and also has suppliers on what is the northernmo­st of Japan’s four main islands.

The magnitude 6.7 earthquake that struck about 3 a.m. Thursday knocked out power to the entire island of 5.4 million people, swamped parts of a neighborho­od in the main city of Sapporo in deep mud and triggered destructiv­e landslides.

Backhoes were removing some of the solidified mud to clear a road in Kiyota ward on the eastern edge of Sapporo. In parts of Kiyota, the earth gave way as it liquefied, tilting homes and leaving manhole covers standing three feet in the air. In parking lots, cars were still stuck in mud that reached part way up their wheels.

The return of electricit­y came as a huge relief for residents. About half of Hokkaido got power back Friday, and all but 20,000 households had power Saturday morning.

“It was a relief that it was back yesterday evening, but it feels it took time,” said 66-year-old Sapporo resident Tatsuo Kimura, adding that the blackout was a reminder “of how important electric power is in our life.”

Tourists from South Korea and China were able to head home from New Chitose Airport, outside of Sapporo. About 1,600 people spent the previous night at the airport, according to Japanese media reports.

Hokkaido has become a popular destinatio­n for tourists from other parts of Asia.

 ?? Eugene Hoshiko The Associated Press ?? Stranded passengers await flights Saturday at New Chitose Airport, outside of Sapporo, Japan. The regional airport was starting to resume operations after hundreds of flights had been canceled, stranding thousands of travelers, because of quake damage.
Eugene Hoshiko The Associated Press Stranded passengers await flights Saturday at New Chitose Airport, outside of Sapporo, Japan. The regional airport was starting to resume operations after hundreds of flights had been canceled, stranding thousands of travelers, because of quake damage.

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