Workers check damage on a road collapsed by an earthquake in Takatsuki, Osaka Prefecture in Japan, on June 18, 2018. (Photo:EPA-EFE) The quake has killed five people and injured hundreds of others
so far, local officials said on Tuesday (June 19).
The fifth fatality as a result of the powerful quake was
confirmed by local police as a 66-year-old man was found dead at his home in
the hard-hit city of Takatsuki in Osaka Prefecture.
According to the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA), dozens of
aftershocks have continued throughout on Tuesday, with a significant tremor
hitting again in the early hours of Tuesday morning and jolting the entire
region again.
The aftershocks made an uncomfortable night for the some 1,700
people who were forced to spend Monday night in emergency evacuation centers,
local Osaka government officials said.
The number of evacuees, as of Tuesday evening, stood at more
than 1,000 people, according to local authorities.
Due to the continued seismic activity and heavy rainfall which
is expected to hit the affected region through Wednesday (June 20), the JMA
has, in an unprecedented move, deployed its emergency task-force to Osaka and
nearby areas to help with recovery efforts and prevent secondary damage.
"Frequent seismic activity is continuing in the northern
part of Osaka Prefecture. Strong tremors could have raised the risk of
landslides or building collapse. People in such areas are advised to watch
out for further seismic activity and rain," the JMA said in an earlier
statement on the issue.
Around 110,000 homes in the quake-hit region remain without gas,
according to Osaka Gas Co., which said that gas supply will remain suspended
until next Monday.
As a result, shoppers have been flocking to supermarkets and
convenience stores to stock up on bread and food that can be microwaved,
local media reported Tuesday.
In some parts of the hard-hit cities of Takatsuki and Minoo,
hundreds of homes also remain without water.
Local authorities have dispatched water trucks to help with the
water shortage in these areas, local officials said.
More than 380 people have been injured as a result of the
powerful temblor and at least 470 houses have been damaged across four
prefectures by the quake, the government said Tuesday.
One of the lives lost in the quake was 9-year-old Rina Miyake
who was on her way to school when the quake struck at 7:58 a.m. local time on
Monday.
Due to the quake's shallow origin, the intensity was violent
enough to bring down the outer wall of Miyake's school swimming pool and
crush the young girl to death.
A police investigation has been launched into the girl's death
as there are suspicions that the wall did not meet safety standards, meaning
the girl's death could have been a result of negligence.
An education ministry official said after investigating the
scene of the fatal accident, the concrete wall may have contained reinforced
steel that was too short to properly connect the concrete-block wall to its
foundations.
|
Source: NDO