Japan floods: Country braces for more rain as death toll rises

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A road is destroyed following torrential rain near the Kuma river in Ashikita, Kumamoto prefecture, on July 6, 2020Image source, AFP
Image caption,
One of the destroyed roads near the Kuma river

Japan is bracing for more heavy rain after a weekend of flooding left at least 37 people dead.

More than 40,000 rescue workers in the south-west were still searching for survivors on Monday, after record rains caused landslides and rivers to burst their banks on Saturday.

Thirteen people remain unaccounted for, with 800 rescued so far, Japan's chief cabinet secretary told reporters.

Another 30cm (12 inches) of rain is expected in the next two days.

BBC Tokyo correspondent Rupert Wingfield-Hayes says that, while it is normal for Western Japan to bear the brunt of the rains sweeping out from the tropics during monsoon season, the last two days have seen truly extraordinary amounts of rain falling over the island of Kyushu.

Media caption,

Heavy rain in Kumamoto prefecture in Kyushu, southern Japan, has led to severe flooding

The prefectures of Kumamoto and Kagoshima have been worst hit, with hundreds of thousands of people advised to evacuate.

However, evacuation centres are running at lower capacity because of the risk of coronavirus, with fire department official Toshihiko Nakamura telling the Kyodo News agency that they had sent some evacuees to another centre due to social distancing rules.

Others have opted to shelter in their cars for fear of infection. According to Kyodo News, they have been given pamphlets telling them how to avoid deep vein thrombosis from staying in one position.

Image source, Reuters
Image caption,
Space in shelters like this one in Kumamoto prefecture is limited because of social distancing rules

Japan's Meteorological Agency said such rainfall had never been seen before in the region.

On Saturday night, the Kuma river burst through its levees in numerous places inundating low-lying settlements.

Fourteen victims were found in one nursing home, after river waters flooded the ground floor. Another 50 were rescued.

It is Japan's worst disaster since Typhoon Hagibis struck last October, killing some 90 people.

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