The wooden home barely withstood the first earthquake. An even stronger one the next night dealt what might have been the final blow, if not to the house, then to the Tanaka family’s peace of mind.Rico says that, like California, it can be dangerous to live on a fault line...
The Tanakas joined about fifty other residents of the southern Japanese town of Ozu who were planning to sleep in their cars at a public park Saturday, after two nights of increasingly terrifying earthquakes that have killed forty people, flattened houses, and triggered major landslides.
“I don’t think we can go back there. Our life is in limbo,” said 62-year-old Yoshiaki Tanaka, as other evacuees served rice balls for dinner. He, his wife, and his 85-year-old mother fled their home after a magnitude 7.3 earthquake struck Saturday at 0125, just two days after a magnitude 6.5 quake hit the same area.
Army troops and other rescuers, using military helicopters to reach some stranded at a mountain resort, rushed to try to reach scores of trapped residents in hard-hit communities near Kumamoto, a city of 740,000 on the southwestern island of Kyushu.
Heavy rain started falling Saturday night, threatening to complicate the relief operation and set off more mudslides.
“Daytime today is the big test” for rescue efforts, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said early Saturday. Landslides had already cut off roads and destroyed bridges, slowing down rescuers.
Nearly two hundred thousand homes were without electricity, Japanese media reported, and an estimated four hundred thousand households were without running water.
Kumamoto prefectural official Riho Tajima said that more than two hundred houses and other buildings had been either destroyed or damaged, and that ninety thousand people had been evacuated from their homes.
Hundreds of people lined up for rations at distribution points before nightfall, bracing for the rain and strong winds that were expected. Local stores quickly ran out of stock and shuttered their doors, and people said they were worried about running out of food.
Police in Kumamoto prefecture said that at least thirty people had died from the morning earthquake. Nine died in the quake on Thursday night.
More than half the deaths were in Mashiki, a town on the eastern border of Kumamoto city that was hit hardest by the first quake.
Japan’s Kyodo news agency reported that four people were missing in Minamiaso, a more rural area farther east of Kumamoto, where landslides were triggered by the second quake. One landslide tore open a mountainside in Minamiaso from the top to a highway below. Another gnawed at a highway, above a smashed house that had fallen down a ravine. In another part of the village, houses were hanging precariously at the edge of a huge hole cut open in the earth.
About fifteen hundred people were injured in the two earthquakes, said Yoshihide Suga, the Japanese government’s spokesman. He said the number of troops in the area was being raised to twenty thousand, while additional police and firefighters were also on the way.
In Mashiki, where people were trapped beneath the rubble for hours, an unconscious ninety-year-old woman, Yumiko Yamauchi, was dragged out from the debris of her home and taken by ambulance to a hospital. Her son-in-law, Tatsuhiko Sakata, said she had refused to move to shelter with him after the first quake Thursday. “When I came to see her last night, I was asking her: ‘Mother? I’m here! Do you remember me? Do you remember my face?’ She replied with a huge smile filled with joy. A kind of smile that I would never forget. And that was the last I saw of her,” Sakata said.
Japanese television showed a collapsed student dormitory at Aso city’s Tokai University that was originally two floors, but now looked like a single-story building. A witness said he heard a cry for help from the rubble. Two students were reported to have died there.
The area has been rocked by aftershocks. The Japan Meteorological Agency said the magnitude 7.3 quake early Saturday may have been the main one, with the one from Thursday night a precursor.
Tanaka, the man spending the night in his car with others in Ozu, had spent Friday starting to clean up the mess from the first earthquake, hoping the aftershocks would gradually subside. “Then came the big one, which was so powerful I couldn’t even stand on my feet. It was horrifying,” he said, adding that when he left, his house was tilted at an angle.
David Rothery, professor of planetary geosciences at The Open University in Britain, said Saturday’s quake was thirty times more powerful than the one Thursday. “It is unusual but not unprecedented for a larger and more damaging earthquake to follow what was taken to be the main event,” he said. Rothery noted that, in March of 2011, a magnitude 7.2 earthquake in northern Japan was followed two days later by the magnitude 9.0 quake that caused a devastating tsunami which killed more than eighteen thousand people.
Mount Aso, near the village of Minamiaso, erupted Saturday for the first time in a month, sending smoke rising about a hundred meters into the air, but no damage was reported. It was not clear whether there was a link between the quakes and the eruption. The sixteen-hundred-meter-high mountain is about a ninety-minute drive from the epicenter.
The second earthquake seriously damaged historic Aso Shrine, a picturesque complex near the volcano. A number of buildings with curved tiled roofs were flattened on the ground like lopsided fans. A towering gate, known as the “cherry blossom gate”, collapsed.
16 April 2016
Japanese earthquake kills forty
Time has an article by Emily Wang and Mari Yamaguchi about yet another deadly quake in Japan:
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