Rescuers in Japan hunt for 80 missing after deadly landslides
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[July 05, 2021]
By Daniel Leussink and Elaine Lies
TOKYO (Reuters) -Rescuers in Japan searched
on Monday for 80 people believed to be missing two days after landslides
tore through the seaside city of Atami, destroying houses and burying
roads under mud and rock.
The official death toll from the landslides that hit early on Saturday
is four, according to Atami city spokesperson Hiroki Onuma, while the
number of missing had come down from 113 earlier.
Two people were found alive and unharmed on Monday, the NHK public
broadcaster reported.
"My mother is still missing," one man told NHK television. "I never
imagined something like this could happen."
Atami, with a population of 36,000, is 90 km (60 miles) southwest of
Tokyo, set on a steep slope leading down to a bay. It is famous for a
hot springs resort.
The landslides are a reminder of the natural disasters - including
earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and tsunami - that haunt Japan, where
the capital Tokyo is to host the summer Olympics beginning this month.
By Monday, the number of rescuers at the disaster site had risen to
1,500, officials said.
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said police, firefighters and members of
the military were doing all they could to help with the search.
"We want to rescue as many victims ... buried in the rubble as soon as
possible," Suga told reporters.
A 75-year-old man had a lucky escape when the house across from his was
swept away. The couple living there are missing.
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More than a thousand Japanese rescuers combed through crumbled
houses and buried roads on Monday two days after landslides tore
through a seaside city, fighting time and poor weather to search for
some 80 people believed missing. Bryan Wood reports.
"This is hell," the man said from an emergency
shelter.
The landslides were triggered by torrential downpours - with some
areas receiving more rain in 24 hours than they would usually get
for the whole of July.
About 130 buildings were affected in Atami.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato called for vigilance, with
the ground so saturated and weakened that even light rain could
prove dangerous.
Onuma said the rain had stopped in Atami but more was forecast.
"The situation is unpredictable," he said.
The disaster boosted the stocks of some engineering firms on Monday.
Raito Kogyo Co Ltd, an expert in slope and foundation improvement,
rose 1.3%, while CE Management Integrated Laboratory Co Ltd, which
offers geological survey and disaster prevention systems, gained
3.1%.
(Reporting by Daniel Leussink, Elaine Lies, and Sakura Murakami;
Additional reporting by Hideyuki Sano; Writing by Elaine Lies;
Editing by Kim Coghill, Christopher Cushing & Simon Cameron-Moore)
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