Friday, 15 April 2016

Troops called in after fresh Japan earthquake


Residents had to take shelter outside the town hall of Mashiki on Thursday night [AP]




Source: ALJAZEERA

Troops have been called in after a second, more powerful earthquake hit southern Japan, killing at least 19 people, toppling large buildings and causing a massive landslide just over a day after an earlier tremor left nine dead.
Friday's earthquake was the second major tremor to rock Japan's south in 24 hours after a 6.2 quake hit near Mashiki town on Thursday, killing nine people and injuring about 1,000 others.
Over 1,500 people have been injured, 80 of them seriously, by the two quakes on the southwestern Kyushu island, Yoshihide Suga, Japanese government spokesperson, said.

Economic activity hit hard
Sony - Halted production of image sensors, plant being inspected, no timeline for resuming production.
Honda - Halted production at its motorcycle plant in Kumamoto. It will keep production on hold through Monday.
Toyota - Halted halted production at three plants producing vehicles, engines and transaxles in Fukuoka.
Nissan - Halted production at its Fukuoka plant which produces vehicles.
Mitsubishi - Halted production of its two plants in Kumamoto which produce parts.
Bridgestone - Halted production at its Kumamoto plant.
Suga says the military will be boosted to 20,000 for rescue efforts. Police and firefighters are also being ordered to the southwestern region.
Japanese media are also reporting the eruption of Mount Aso, the largest active volcano in Japan located on the island. That is the first eruption in a month.
moke is rising about 100 metres but no damage has been reported.
"We have just been woken up by a very large earthquake in the main town of Kumamoto. Things were thrown about in the hotel," said Al Jazeera's Rob McBride, reporting from Mashiki near the epicentre.
"We can't see much damage, but we feel very large aftershocks."
The powerful shaking set off a huge landslide that swept away homes and cut off a highway in one area, and unlike the earlier quake which mostly affected old houses, larger buildings were damaged and some toppled across Kumamoto prefecture.
According to the Japan Meteorological Agency, Mashiki sits near two faults on Kyushu.
"There is a great possibly that the damage will spread widely so we must give it our all to gather the information on the damage situation and make the rescues and relief," Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister, said on Saturday.
After Thursday's initial tremors, more than 3,000 troops, police, and firefighters were dispatched to the area from around Japan.
About 44,000 people stayed in shelters.
Over 1,500 people have been injured, 80 of them seriously, by the earthquake [AP]
Japan is frequently hit by major quakes. In March 2011, a 9.0-magnitude earthquake led to a devastating tsunami that killed 18,000 people along Japan's northeast coast.
The wave struck the Fukushima nuclear plant, causing a major radiation leakage.  
More than 100,000 displaced people are still unable to return to their homes near the nuclear plant because of the contamination.
The city office in Uto was badly damaged and said to be in danger of collapse, while aerial footage shot by broadcaster TBS showed the toppled centuries-old Aso shrine, its main gates flattened and wooden columns reduced to rubble.
A large fire that broke out at an apartment complex in Yatsushiro killed one person, city official confirmed.

Airport closed

In nearby Kumamoto city, authorities evacuated patients from a hospital over fears it could collapse and images showed the tilted building.
The region's transport network suffered considerable damage with one tunnel caved in, a highway bridge damaged, roads blocked by landslips and train services halted, media reported.
Kumamoto airport was forced to close after a ceiling collapsed from the shaking, Jiji Press reported, with no immediate plans to resume flights, and communications in the area were spotty.
Gen Aoki, a Japan Meteorological Agency official, said Saturday's quake was the strongest to hit in recent days, and that Thursday's was merely a "precursor".
The US Geological Survey measured the quake at magnitude 7.0, or 6.3 times bigger than the 6.2 tremor recorded on Thursday.

Japan Meteorological Agency, which put the magnitude at a revised 7.3, initially issued a tsunami warning for the western coast of Kyushu but later lifted it.
There have been more than 230 aftershocks of at least level 1 on the Japanese scale since Thursday's shock, said Japan's meteorological agency.
Japan is on the seismically active Ring of Fire around the Pacific Ocean and has building codes aimed at helping structures withstand earthquakes.

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