Morgan Stanley
India | Wednesday, 20 August 2008
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Japan quake rescuers fight aftershocks

By Eric Talmadge
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Posted 15 June 2008 @ 02:23 pm GMT

Soldiers fought their way through a torrent of mud and rocks at a hot spring Sunday, where several people were believed buried after a magnitude 7.2-earthquake hit the mountains of northern Japan, killing at least seven and injuring more than 200.

Japan's Self-Defense Forces troopers make their way through a mountain road with cracks caused by Saturday's earthquake at Kurihara, northern Japan, on Sunday June 15, 2008
Japan's Self-Defense Forces troopers make their way through a mountain road with cracks caused by Saturday's earthquake at Kurihara, northern Japan, on Sunday June 15, 2008. Soldiers fighting through a torrent of mud and rocks dug out three bodies at...

Rescuers, often forced to resort to shovels and buckets, raced to dig their way through the mire as helicopters kept watch overhead and troops on the ground used backhoes to unblock roads covered by tons of fallen rock, dirt and trees.

Officials said the bodies of three of seven people believed buried at the hot spring were recovered Sunday, bringing the tally of dead to nine. A dozen or so more people were missing.

The seven at the Komanoyu hot spring were believed buried when the side of a hill came crashing down. The resort is located in a heavily forested mountainous area outside the small city of Kurihara, one of the hardest hit, and more than 100 people remained stranded in the region.

The search for survivors and efforts to recover the dead were hampered by a series of powerful aftershocks that have rocked the region: More than 470 were recorded since Saturday morning. A rescue effort near a dam where three construction workers were killed was called off Sunday because of fears the dam may have been cracked by the quake.

"It's so frustrating. We have hardly made any progress because of the sludge," said Masahiro Ishibashi, a soldier searching to find the seven missing people at the hot spring.

A group of rescue workers had to suspend their search for a missing construction worker at one of the landslides, where muddy water started gushing out, raising fears of secondary disaster.

Access was also a major problem, with many roads buckled, at least one bridge collapsed and the danger of more landslides along the routes that appeared clear.

Tohoku University geologist Motoki Kazama said the area was especially vulnerable to landslides because it is of volcanic origin, and contains a large amount of loose ash. Some of the landslides swept off the sides of the hills and spread out for several hundred yards, he said.

"With a quake of this magnitude, it isn't surprising that there was this amount of land movement," he said after finishing an inspection near the hot spring.

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