Shaken residents of a southern Japanese island rocked by a powerful earthquake that left at least nine dead queued for water in rubble-strewn streets yesterday, with many facing a second night of uncertainty away from their ruined homes.
Rescuers continued to search through damaged buildings for possible survivors after the violent quake that also injured hundreds, although officials said the death toll was unlikely to rise significantly.
Tens of thousands of people fled their homes after the 6.5-magnitude quake struck the southwestern island of Kyushu on Thursday night, leaving lumps of concrete strewn in the streets.
Houses collapsed, factories stopped work and a high-speed train was derailed, while the roof of the treasured Kumamoto castle in the southern city of the same name was also damaged.
“We tried our best to take all our belongings and go to a shelter by car,” said Haruki Ito, 62, whose house tilted 45 degrees after the quake.
“Our dogs got so scared and hid themselves inside the collapsed house,” he told AFP, adding that he hoped he and his wife could stay in a local shelter with their pets.
Dozens of aftershocks followed the quake, which hit about 9.26pm (1226 GMT) on Thursday evening, and officials warned the death toll could still rise as rescuers scoured the collapsed structures.
As rescue workers toiled through the night hours after the quake struck, an eight-month-old baby girl was pulled from the rubble alive and unharmed.
“As far as we can tell from infrared images from a police helicopter, there appears to be a significant number of houses destroyed or half-collapsed,” said disaster minister Taro Kono.
Rescuers were concentrating their searches in Mashiki, near the epicentre of the quake where eight of the nine deaths occurred.
On the streets, the remains of collapsed Japanese-style houses – many of them aged, wooden structures – could be seen, and damaged roof tiles lay in piles.
A rescue team with several search dogs patrolled around half-collapsed houses in the town but no new deaths had been announced for more than 14 hours.
Scores of people spent the night huddled in front of Mashiki’s town hall, some in tears, while others wrapped themselves in blankets to ward off the night chill.
By yesterday afternoon, the government said it had confirmed that 881 people were injured, at least 52 seriously.
An official from the local Kumamoto disaster agency said at least nine were dead.
But Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said at a regular press conference that the death toll was unlikely to sharply increase, but that search operations were continuing just to make sure.
He added that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe plans to visit Kumamoto today to meet victims.
Gen Aoki, a Japan Meteorological Agency seismologist, urged residents to be on guard for more aftershocks and warned rain in coming days could make the situation worse.
About 24,900 households in Kumamoto prefecture have been left without water, according to the government, a big improvement from an earlier figure of about 57,000.
But those still without lined up to get water in plastic bottles or tanks as night began to fall yesterday.
Nuclear plants in the region were unaffected, but several major manufacturers including Honda, Bridgestone, and Sony said they had suspended operations at factories in the area.
Train services on Kyushu were temporarily halted and a bullet train derailed – luckily while empty – said Yusuke Nanri, a spokesman for operator JR Kyushu.
Bullet train services remained suspended, JR said on its website.
Some 1,600 military personnel were joined by nearly 2,000 police officers and more than 1,300 firefighters to help in the search and rescue efforts, Suga said.
The initial quake, which struck at a shallow depth of 10km (6.2 miles), was followed two and a half hours later by another measuring 6.4 magnitude, according to Japan’s meteorological agency.
The US Geological Survey (USGS) measured it a lower 6.2 magnitude.
In total, more than 130 tremors rocked the region after the first one hit, and officials warned this could continue for a week or so.
Japan, one of the most seismically active countries in the world, suffered a massive undersea quake on March 11, 2011 that sent a tsunami barrelling into the country’s northeast coast.
Some 18,500 people were left dead or missing, and several nuclear reactors went into meltdown at the Fukushima plant in the worst atomic accident in a generation.
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