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		 Aftershocks 
		bring misery for Japan quake survivors; death toll to 47 
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		[April 20, 2016] 
		By Elaine Lies
 TOKYO (Reuters) - Aftershocks rattled 
		survivors of deadly Japanese earthquakes, nearly a week after the first 
		one struck, as the area braced for heavy rain later on Wednesday and the 
		possibility of more landslides.
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			 Rescuers using backhoes and shovels to dig through crumbled houses 
			swept away in a landslide found a lifeless woman, one of several 
			people still missing, taking the toll of dead to 47. 
 Hundreds of people in the Kumamoto area of southwestern Japan spent 
			another night in their cars, afraid to return to damaged houses.
 
 Medical experts warned of the danger of potentially fatal blood 
			clots from sitting too long in cramped conditions - so-called 
			economy class syndrome - after a 51-year-old woman died and at least 
			12 people were hospitalized because of it.
 
 Eleven people appear to have died of illnesses related to their 
			prolonged stay in evacuation centers, NHK national television said. 
			The first quake hit late on April 14 and the largest, at magnitude 
			7.3, some 27 hours later.
 
			
			   "I keep thinking the earthquakes will stop, but they just go on and 
			on," one woman at an evacuation center in Mashiki, one of the 
			worst-hit areas, told NHK.
 "It's really scary."
 
 A 5.5-magnitude quake hit on Tuesday night. Of more than 680 
			aftershocks hitting Kyushu island since April 14, more than 89 have 
			registered at magnitude 4 or more on Japan's intensity scale, strong 
			enough to shake buildings.
 
 Nearly 100,000 people are in evacuation centers, some huddling in 
			blankets outside as night temperatures fell as low as 8 Celsius (46 
			Fahrenheit) or queueing in long lines in the sun and 25C heat for 
			bowls of noodles, their first hot food in days.
 
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			Heavy rain is expected over the area - 120 mm (4.7 inches) for 
			Wednesday and early Thursday - raising fear that slopes weakened by 
			the quakes could collapse.
 Authorities have begun condemning buildings and other structures 
			deemed unsafe. Hundreds, possibly thousands, of buildings collapsed, 
			many brought down by their heavy roofs of traditional tiles.
 
 Though public buildings must abide by stringent safety standards, 
			the law is lax for private homes.
 
 "When a big earthquake hits, structures may sustain damage that's 
			impossible to fix if there's another quake within days," said Akira 
			Wada, professor emeritus at Tokyo Institute of Technology.
 
 Most of those who were killed had returned to their homes after the 
			first quake.
 
 (Additional reporting by Kwiyeon Ha; Editing by Robert Birsel)
 
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