One dead, 170 hurt in Japan quake

A strong earthquake killed one person and injured more than 170 in Japan today, demolishing houses, buckling roads, triggering…

A strong earthquake killed one person and injured more than 170 in Japan today, demolishing houses, buckling roads, triggering landslides and cutting off water supplies to thousands of homes.

More than 1,300 people evacuated to shelters after 44 houses collapsed and some 200 others, mostly wooden with heavy tile roofs, were seriously damaged by the 6.9 magnitude earthquake, which struck at 9.42am (1.42am Irish time), officials and media said.

The focus of the quake - which was also felt in Tokyo - was 11 km below the seabed off the Noto peninsula in Ishikawa prefecture, about 300 km west of Tokyo.

The mountainous peninsula in central Japan is known for its hot spring resorts. More than 100 aftershocks jolted the area, including one with a magnitude of 5.3 more than eight hours after the first quake, which was the biggest in the area since records began in 1926.

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Officials warned more aftershocks could follow.

A 52-year-old woman died in Wajima, a resort and fishing town on the western side of the peninsula, after being trapped under a stone lantern that toppled in her garden.

In Nanao, a resort and fishing city with a population of around 60,000, ambulance services were flooded with calls to help people who had suffered burns and injuries.