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"The scale of this
-- the entire coastline -- makes it all so overwhelming," he said. "It's something even we professionals haven't ever encountered." The disaster left 15,839 dead and 3,647 missing, according to the official toll. The high number of missing is because the dead are only counted when a body is identified. Further south, the tsunami also touched off a nuclear crisis when it slammed into the Fukushima Dai-ichi power plant, forcing about 100,000 people to flee their homes. They still have no idea when they can return. Disposing of all the debris -- an estimated 23 million tons -- is another huge headache. While most has been removed from town centers, completely disposing of it will likely take another 2 1/2 years, the government estimates. A large amount of debris has wound up in Natori, a flat area near the Sendai airport, where it has been carefully divided into huge mountains of wood, metal, hazardous waste and other materials. On Friday, dozens of cranes and backhoes picked away at the stuff, dumping it into waiting trucks to be hauled off. Some of it is recycled. Concrete, for example, is sent to cement factories for reprocessing into small pebbles for use in road construction, the Environment Ministry says. The rest is to be incinerated and used as landfill
-- although incinerators in the prefecture are overwhelmed by the volume and have asked for help from elsewhere. Just a few miles (kilometers) away from the whirring construction vehicles, 75-year-old Yaeko Sai, who lost her Natori home in the tsunami, thinks anxiously about the future in the shadow of her temporary housing block. "My friends have scattered everywhere," she said. "I'm really not sure how I could make it if I had to leave this place."
[Associated
Press;
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