Saturday, 16 April 2016
Rescue efforts after second Japan quake
Some 20,000 troops are being deployed in the operation in
Kyushu region after the magnitude-7.3 quake at 01:25 on
Saturday (15:25 GMT Friday).
At least 18 people have been killed and hundreds injured,
media reports say.
Dozens of people are feared trapped in the rubble of
collapsed buildings. The quake on Thursday killed nine
people.Roads have been damaged and big landslides have been
reported over a wide area. Some 200,000 households are
now without power.
There are fears that forecast rain could set off more
mudslides.
Collapsed dam
The extra troops are being sent to Kyushu to help police and
firefighters. "We are making every effort to respond," Chief
Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said.
The second quake - which was at a depth of 10km (six miles)
near Kumamoto - was much bigger and hit a wider area than
the one that struck the city of Kumamoto on Thursday night.
Kumamoto prefectural official Tomoyuki Tanaka told AP that
the death toll was climbing by the hour.
Thousands of people spent the night on the streets and in
parks - where they were huddled under blankets looking
dazed and afraid.
There are many reports of people trapped inside buildings,
including at least 60 inside an old people's home.
One village has been evacuated after a dam collapsed as a
result of the quake, public broadcaster NHK says.
Japan's nuclear authority said the Sendai nuclear plant was
not damaged.
A small eruption occurred at Mt Aso following the tremor,
media reports say.
Gavin Hayes, a research geophysicist with the US Geological
Survey (USGS) in Colorado, told the BBC the latest
earthquake would hamper the earlier rescue operation that
was already under way.
He said more damage could be expected as the earthquake
had been shallower and the fault-line had been much
longer.
"The ground surface would have moved in the region of
4-5m (yards). So, you are talking very intense shaking over
quite a large area. And that's why we'll probably see a
significant impact from this event."
Thursday's magnitude-6.2 quake caused shaking at some
places as intense as the huge earthquake that hit the country
in 2011, Japan's seismology office said.
The 2011 quake sparked a huge tsunami and nuclear
meltdown at the Fukushima power plant.
Most of those who died in Thursday's quake were in the
town of Mashiki where an apartment building collapsed and
many houses were damaged. More than 1,000 people were
injured.
Some 40,000 people initially fled their homes, with many of
those closest to the epicentre spending the night outside, as
more than 130 aftershocks had hit the area.
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