Heavy rain hampers Japan landslide rescue effort

Prime minister under pressure over his handling of fatal disaster near Hiroshima

Japan Self-Defence Force soldiers search for survivors in the rain at a site where a landslide swept through a residential area at Asaminami ward in Hiroshima, western Japan. Photograph: Toru Hanai/Reuters.
Japan Self-Defence Force soldiers search for survivors in the rain at a site where a landslide swept through a residential area at Asaminami ward in Hiroshima, western Japan. Photograph: Toru Hanai/Reuters.

Heavy rain has delayed a search for more than 50 people believed buried under a deadly landslide on the edge of the Japanese city of Hiroshima, as opposition politicians rounded on prime minister Shinzo Abe for his handling of the disaster.

Rescue workers feared the continuing rain could set off further landslides in the area after a month’s worth of rain fell in one night on Wednesday, loosening slopes already saturated by heavy rain over the past few weeks.

The death toll currently stands at 39.

Mr Abe has been criticised by the opposition for playing several rounds of golf on the day of the disaster before breaking it off to rush back to Tokyo. Critics have also slammed his returning to his vacation villa afterwards.

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Among those killed were two brothers, aged 11 and 2, and a firefighter who was engulfed by mud as he was carrying a toddler to safety. The child also perished.

"There was a really strange smell, a very raw, earthy smell. When we opened a window to see what was going on, the entire hillside just came down, with a crackling noise, a thundering noise," one woman told Fuji television.

She and her husband fled just before their house filled with mud, leaving 5 metre boulders where they had been sleeping.

About 240mm of rain fell in the area about 3 km from the centre of the city in the 24 hours up to Wednesday morning, the Meterological Agency said. Roughly half of that rain fell in one hour.

Cities in land-scarce Japan often expand into mountainous areas, with houses tucked just below steep slopes, leaving them vulnerable to landslides.

Reuters