Japanese villages wait for help after quake
Sign up now: Get insights on Asia's fast-moving developments
Many other communities are still cut off, with hundreds of landslides having made many roads impassable.
PHOTO: AFP
Follow topic:
SHIROMARU, Japan – Twenty-five minutes after the New Year’s Day earthquake,
One person died, but the roughly 100 inhabitants like Mr Yukio Teraoka and his wife – well drilled in what to do in seismic hot spot Japan – dashed out of their houses and fled to higher ground in time.
“We cannot live in our house any more,” Mr Teraoka, 82, told AFP as he and his wife shovelled the heavy, sodden sand brought by the waves out of their wrecked home.
“There is 30kg of rice stored in this,” said his wife, in red rubber gloves, woolly hat and face mask, pointing to a hefty steel container the size of a refrigerator that rolled on the ground.
“But it’s all waste now after being soaked in seawater.”
Elsewhere in the village, one of several that dot the small coves of the Noto peninsula hit by the 7.6-magnitude quake, a tangled mass of wooden, metal and plastic debris litters the streets.
The detritus includes furniture, mattresses, shoes and, by one mangled metal fence, a forlorn and soggy Snoopy stuffed toy, even though like many villages in ageing Japan, Shiromaru has no children of elementary school age.
Lack of supplies
The death toll from the quake and its aftermath on Jan 6 topped 100,
Buffeted by the salty seaside wind, only a few people were cleaning up in Shiromaru on Jan 5, four days on from the disaster, with little help from the over-stretched authorities.
“I don’t think we have received substantial supplies or food,” said Mr Takushi Sakashita, 59, who lives nearby.
He added that he has refrained from taking food rations at a nearby shelter so they would go to people more in need.
“I myself try not to move around to save petrol, because fuel stations are not working and there is a serious lack of fuel,” he said.
Shiromaru at least remains reachable along the main road.
Many other communities are still cut off, with hundreds of landslides having made many roads impassable. Tens of thousands of people are without power or running water.
Submerged
Mr Toshio Sakashita said his house was submerged in about 2.5m of water.
“The tsunami came from the cove of Shiromaru through the river, and then ran up through the street,” said the 69-year-old.
The raging mass of water swept through the first storey of many of the wooden houses, scattering their belongings.
“We have received no public support here. Look, the main street is still blocked due to the rubble, which has been left untouched,” he said.
Mr Teraoka said: “We will have to stay at a shelter with everyone else for about three months or so.”
“And then for two to three more years, we will live in temporary housing, because the whole Ishikawa prefecture is suffering from the disaster,” he added.
“We will die sooner or later. We are over 80 already.” AFP

