At least 11 dead in Japan floods as more rain falls
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About 12,300 soldiers, policemen and firemen clambered across expanses of debris of splintered wood and mud hoping to reach about 500 people cut off by landslides, NHK reported. Large boulders and uprooted trees blocked streets as residents with heavy bags picked their way carefully through their neighbourhoods.
"At first, it wasn't raining that much," said Sumie Umeyo, a resident of Asakura city. "But they spoke of record-breaking rain and it started raining heavily, then they began closing the roads. We looked outside and the roads were like rivers," Umeyo said.
Fukuoka and neighbouring Oita, the hardest hit areas, are both largely rural but rivers were also rising in the city of Kitakyushu, which has a population of some 950,000 and issued evacuation orders for several districts.
The rain was caused by a low pressure area over the Pacific that fed warm, moist air into Japan's seasonal rainy front.


