Residents stand on the street following an earthq
Source: CHANNELS NEWSASIA
TOKYO: Nine people were killed after a powerful earthquake hit
southern Japan, collapsing homes, sparking fires and injuring hundreds,
officials said on Friday (Apr 15) as rescuers worked through the night
to find residents feared trapped in rubble.
Tens of thousands of
people reportedly fled their homes and television footage showed damaged
buildings, buckled roads and lumps of broken concrete in the streets
after the 6.5-magnitude quake struck the southwestern island of Kyushu.
NHK
footage showed what appeared to be a house ablaze and firefighters
dousing it with water, one of several fires reportedly sparked by the
quake that left at least 780 injured, according to the public
broadcaster.
A camera in one of its offices showed violent shaking
as the earthquake hit, with computer monitors and files tumbling off
shelves as employees fell to the floor to take cover.
"I felt
quite strong jolts, which I had never experienced before," Shunsuke
Sakuragi, a prefectural official in the city of Kumamoto, told AFP.
"People were shocked but I have not seen any extreme confusion in the
city."
In the neighbouring Mashiki, scores of people gathered in front the
town hall following the powerful shaking, some in tears and looking
distressed, while others wrapped themselves in blankets to ward off the
nighttime chill.
At least nine people were confirmed dead, a
Kumamoto disaster management official said. "We also received
information indicating a few people were under collapsed houses," said
Sakuragi.
As the death toll rose in the night - earlier reports
said two people had died - an eight-month-old baby girl was pulled from
the rubble alive and unharmed, NHK reported.
Some 350 military personnel were dispatched for rescue work on the
island, spokesman Yoshihide Suga said, appealing for calm. "I ask people
in the disaster zone to act calmly and help each other," he said.
Officials
in Kumamoto prefecture said they were considering evacuating a hospital
that was badly damaged, while several major manufacturers including
Honda, Bridgestone, Mitsubishi and Sony suspended operations at their
factories in the area, according to reports.
NUCLEAR REACTORS UNAFFECTED
The
initial quake at 9.26pm (8.26pm Singapore time) was followed two and a
half hours later by another strong one measuring 6.4 magnitude in the
same region, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.
In
total, more than 30 earthquakes rocked the region after the first hit,
and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe convened a meeting of emergency management
officials, according to Suga.
Japan's two sole operating nuclear
reactors, located on Kyushu, were functioning normally, an official at
the Sendai plant told AFP.
Japan, one of the most seismically
active countries in the world, has been particularly on edge over the
vulnerability of nuclear power plants after a massive undersea quake on
Mar 11, 2011 that sent a tsunami barrelling into the country's northeast
coast.
Some 18,500 people were left dead or missing, and several
nuclear reactors went into meltdown at the Fukushima plant in the worst
atomic accident in a generation.
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