Eleven die as typhoon hits northern Japan

Published September 2, 2016
Iwaizumi (Japan): A car lies on its roof beside an elderly care home after Typhoon Lionrock made landfall on Thursday.—AFP
Iwaizumi (Japan): A car lies on its roof beside an elderly care home after Typhoon Lionrock made landfall on Thursday.—AFP

TOKYO: Seventeen people were unaccounted for in Japan on Thursday after Typhoon Lionrock tore through the north of the country, leaving 11 people dead and some 1,600 cut off in isolated communities, officials said.

Ten died in the town of Iwaizumi after it was hit by surging river water and mud, with nine of them perishing in a care home for the elderly. The typhoon, which packed wind gusts of over 160 kilometres an hour landed on Japan’s northern Pacific coast on Tuesday evening.

It tore through the region, dumping torrential rain over a wide area, stranding communities, with roads and bridges destroyed or blocked, authorities said.

“We have 17 people who cannot be reached nor their safety confirmed,” town official Yasuyuki Ishiguro said, adding the number includes those who have been reported as missing, though he did not provide a breakdown.

“We believe many of the 17 are in communities isolated after roads and communications were cut off,” he added. “A wide area of the town remains inundated with mud and rubble.” he said.

Nine of the town’s 10 dead were found on Wednesday morning buried inside a building of the elderly care facility after water, mud, trees and rubble gushed into it.

Another body was discovered not far from the care home, while another person died in the city of Kuji.

Iwaizumi, with a population of about 10,000, failed to issue an evacuation advisory near the care home, according to the Iwate prefectural government.

The elderly care facility had also failed to draw up an evacuation plan in the case of flooding, the mass-circulation Asahi Shimbun newspaper said.

Published in Dawn, September 2nd, 2016

Opinion

Editorial

E-governance
Updated 10 Jan, 2025

E-governance

Wishing for a viable e-governance system seems like a pipe dream when stable internet connectivity is not guaranteed.
Khuzdar rampage
10 Jan, 2025

Khuzdar rampage

THE two most lethal terrorist threats that confront Pakistan are religiously inspired militants, led by the banned...
Beyond wheelchairs
10 Jan, 2025

Beyond wheelchairs

THE KP government’s Rs370m assistance programme for persons with disabilities is a positive step, not only in ...
Taking cover
Updated 09 Jan, 2025

Taking cover

IT is unfortunate that, instead of taking ownership of important decisions, our officials usually seem keener to ...
A living hell
09 Jan, 2025

A living hell

WHAT Donald Trump does domestically when he enters the White House in just under two weeks is frankly the American...
A right denied
09 Jan, 2025

A right denied

DESPITE citizens possessing the constitutional and legal right to access it, federal ministries are failing to...