Reuters AlertNet Full site
Homepage | Newsdesk | NGO Latest | Crisis briefings | Country profiles | MediaWatch | Jobs | Alerting | Login

NEWSDESK

Uncertainty ahead for quake-hit Japan peninsula
27 Mar 2007 06:52:42 GMT
Source: Reuters
(Adds details, comment in last four paragraphs)

By Issey Kato

WAJIMA, Japan, March 27 (Reuters) - Victims of a powerful weekend earthquake in central Japan that killed one person and destroyed hundreds of homes faced an uncertain future on Tuesday, with few signs of when life would return to normal.

About 1,900 people spent a second night in evacuation centres as hundreds of aftershocks continued to jolt the area following Sunday's 6.9 magnitude quake, which struck the Noto peninsula in Ishikawa prefecture, about 300 km (190 miles) west of Tokyo.

The tremor demolished 57 houses and seriously damaged more than 700 others, many of them old wooden structures with heavy tile roofs. More than 200 people were hurt, although most injuries were minor. Electric power was fully restored but some 8,700 homes still lacked running water, and troops and aid workers were distributing emergency supplies.

"My husband and I have spent two nights in an emergency shelter," said Kiyomi Tanabe, 66, whose home in the rural city of Wajima was almost completely destroyed.

"We are very tired," she said. "We could not sleep well because we are afraid of aftershocks. We don't have any gas supply, and we don't have enough water at the shelter."

Some people were taking shelter in their cars, domestic media reports said, something medical experts advise against because the cramped conditions can cause health problems including blood clots.

ELDERLY STRUGGLE

Rain was forecast for the region in the evening, prompting fears of landslides.

Television showed elderly people being carried to shelters by rescue workers. More than a third of Wajima's 35,000 population is aged over 65.

Past severe quakes in Kobe and Niigata have proven particularly traumatic for the elderly, many of whom suffered from depression when they were forced to move into temporary housing because they were cut off from their local communities.

The peninsula's centuries-old lacquerware industry, on which much of the population relies for a living, was surveying the damage to its 600 ateliers and shops.

"Ever since Japan's economic bubble burst in the 1990s, the lacquerware industry has been on the decline," said Dai Keizuka, who owns a family-run lacquerware studio established 90 years ago.

"Then this earthquake dealt us another severe blow. Nonetheless, we'll try to keep alive the traditional industry started by our ancestors."

A single piece of antique Wajima lacquerware can be worth more than $200,000, and one gallery in the city estimated that 10 percent of its exhibits had been damaged in the quake.


AlertNet news is provided by

Email this article       Send comments

Topics

•  Earthquakes

MORE >>

NGO latest

•  A GLOOMY SATURDAY IN JAVA
Muslim Aid - UK

•  Strong Earthquake Endangers Families in Western Sumatra
Save the Children - International Alliance

•  ELDERLY QUAKE SURVIVOR REBUILDS LIFE
Muslim Aid - UK

•  IMC Responds to Earthquakes in Indonesia
IMC - USA

•  Mercy Corps Scales Up Sumatra Quake Relief Efforts
Mercy Corps

MORE >>

Latest news

•  Uncertainty ahead for quake-hit Japan peninsula

•  Japan says it will keep stockpiling Tamiflu

•  Uncertainty ahead for quake-hit Japan peninsula

•  Aftershocks keep quake-hit Japan peninsula on edge

•  Japan quake reminds Tokyo of potential disaster

MORE >>

Disclaimers |  Copyright |  Privacy |  Contact Us |  Feedback |  About Us |  RSS XML

Last updated:Tue Mar 27 06:53:30 2007