Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida vowed to provide “ceaseless” support to areas devastated by the earthquake on Monday last week, as snow and sleet hampered rescue and relief efforts and local media reported that the disaster had now claimed at least 126 lives.
The adverse weather on the Noto Peninsula continued to vex survivors at the epicenter of the magnitude 7.5 quake that left more than 30,000 homeless and cut power to tens of thousands of residences and businesses.
At least 222 people are still reported missing and more heavy snow or rain is forecast overnight for the region.
Photo: AFP
Footage on national broadcaster NHK showed construction trucks digging through piles of dirt to unearth houses buried by landslides.
“Rescuing people trapped under the rubble and responding to isolated areas are issues that must be tackled with the highest priority,” Kishida said on an NHK program yesterday.
“As we move forward with ceaseless reconstruction and recovery efforts, we must not hesitate in responding due to budget constraints in the disaster-affected areas,” he added.
Kishida on Friday said that his government would tap ¥4.74 billion (US$32.8 million) of budget reserves for reconstruction efforts.
The governor of Ishikawa Prefecture declared a state of emergency on Saturday, calling the quake “an unprecedented disaster” for the region.
In the city of Wajima, on the peninsula’s northern coast, a line of cars stretching as far as the eye could see had formed to refuel at a gas station as fuel supply to the region gradually returned.
Prefectural governments have sent trailers equipped with several flushable toilets to evacuation centers in Wajima and other disaster-struck cities, where water supplies are only just restarting, NHK reported.
At a center near Wajima’s famed Asaichi morning market, which burnt to the ground after the quake, some of the 700 people taking shelter there stood in a line on a stairway, passing boxes of water to higher floors.
The center’s receptionist said that they are full and not accepting new evacuees.
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