Rescuers race to find survivors after Japan floods kill over 100
Thousands left without electricity and water as temperature rises above 30 deg C
JAPAN: Rescuers in western Japan dug through mud and rubble yesterday, racing to find survivors after torrential rains unleashed floods and landslides that killed more than 100 people, with dozens missing.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe cancelled an overseas trip because of the disaster, a ruling party source said. The trip would have taken him to Belgium, France, Saudi Arabia and Egypt from tomorrow.
Rain tapered off across the region battered by the downpour, revealing blue skies and scorching sun forecast to push temperatures above 30 deg C, fuelling fears of heatstroke in areas cut off from power or water.
"We cannot take baths, the toilet does not work and our food stockpile is running low," said Ms Yumeko Matsui, whose home in Mihara city has been without water since Saturday.
"Bottled water and bottled tea are all gone from convenience stores and other shops," the 23-year-old nursery school worker said at an emergency water supply station.
Nearly 13,000 customers had no electricity, power companies said yesterday, while hundreds of thousands had no water.
The death toll reached at least 110 after flood waters forced several million from their homes, NHK said, in the worst flood disaster since 117 people were killed in heavy rains in 1983.
A nine-year-old boy was among the dead.
"He always used to come to our house to play games and things," a teenage neighbour told NHK. "It is sad."
Another 79 people were missing, NHK said.
Though continuous rain had ended, officials warned against sudden showers and thunderstorms as well as the risk of further landslides on steep mountainsides.
Industry operations have also been hit, with Mazda Motor Corp saying it was forced to close its head office in Hiroshima yesterday.
The automaker, which suspended operations at several plants last week, said the halt would continue at two plants until today because it cannot receive components, although both units were undamaged.
Daihatsu, which suspended production on Friday at up to four plants, said they would run the second evening shift yesterday.- REUTERS
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