AT least 30 people are dead after a series of powerful earthquakes hit western Japan, with officials warning people in some areas on Tuesday to stay away from their homes due to the risk of more strong quakes.
Aftershocks continued to shake Ishikawa prefecture as well as nearby areas a day after a magnitude 7.6 temblor hit the area on Monday afternoon.
Officials in Ishikawa confirmed that thirty people have died, fourteen others have been seriously injured and that damage to homes was so great it could not immediately be assessed.
Meanwhile, Japanese media has reported that tens of thousands of homes have been destroyed.
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Government spokesperson Yoshimasa Hayashi said 17 people were seriously injured and gave a slightly lower death tally, while saying he was aware of the prefecture’s tally.
Water, power and mobile phone service were still down in some areas, and residents expressed sorrow about their destroyed homes and uncertain futures.
“It’s not just that it’s a mess. The wall has collapsed, and you can see through to the next room. I don’t think we can live here anymore,” Miki Kobayashi, an Ishikawa resident, said as she swept around her house.
Their house was also damaged in a 2007 quake, she said.
Japan’s military dispatched 1000 soldiers to the disaster zones to join rescue efforts, prime minister Fumio Kishida said.
“Saving lives is our priority and we are fighting a battle against time,” he said.
“It is critical that people trapped in homes get rescued immediately.”
A quake with a preliminary magnitude of 5.6 shook the area as he was speaking.
Japan’s military dispatched 1000 soldiers to the disaster zones to join rescue efforts, Kishida said, stressing they were facing “large-scale damage”.
Details of damaged homes were still under investigation, he said.
Firefighters were able to bring a fire under control in Wajima city which had reddened the sky with embers and smoke.
Nuclear regulators said several nuclear plants in the region were operating normally. A major quake and tsunami in March 2011 caused three reactors to melt and release large amounts of radiation at a nuclear plant in north-eastern Japan.
News videos showed rows of collapsed houses. Some wooden structures were flattened and cars were overturned. Half-sunken ships floated in bays where tsunami waves had rolled in, leaving a muddied coastline.
On Monday, the Japan Meteorological Agency issued a major tsunami warning for Ishikawa and lower-level tsunami warnings or advisories for the rest of the western coast of Japan’s main island of Honshu, as well as for the northern island of Hokkaido.
The warning was downgraded several hours later, and all tsunami warnings were lifted as of early on Tuesday. Waves measuring more than one metre hit some places.
The agency warned that more major quakes could hit the area over the next few days.
People who were evacuated from their houses huddled in auditoriums, schools and community centres.
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Bullet trains in the region were halted, but service was being restored in some places. Sections of highways were closed, water pipes burst, and mobile phone service was out in some areas.
Weather forecasters predicted rain, setting off worries about already crumbling buildings and infrastructure.
The region includes tourist spots famous for lacquerware and other traditional crafts, along with designated cultural heritage sites.
Joe Biden (above) said in a statement that his administration was “ready to provide any necessary assistance for the Japanese people”.
Japan is frequently hit by earthquakes because of its location along the Ring of Fire, an arc of volcanoes and fault lines in the Pacific Basin.
Over the last day, the nation has experienced about a hundred aftershocks.
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