A damaged car lies underneath a collapsed building at Shika town in Hakui District, Ishikawa Prefecture on Jan. 8, 2024 after a major 7.5 magnitude earthquake.Photo:PHILIP FONG/AFP via Getty
PHILIP FONG/AFP via Getty
A woman in her 90s defied the odds when she was rescued from a collapsed home five days following the deadly earthquake in western Japan, according to various news outlets.
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Meanwhile, rescue and recovery efforts are ongoing,NHKreported, following the 7.6 magnitude quake on Jan. 3 that hit Japan’s western region, killing about 168 people. The broadcaster added that more than 300 people are still missing in Ishikawa Prefecture.
Included in the death toll was a 5-year-old boy who was recovering after suffering injuries from boiling water that spilled on him when the quake struck, per theAssociated Press.
Firefighters search for survivers in snow-covered ruins in the city of Suzu, Ishikawa prefecture on Jan. 8, 2024, a week after a major 7.5 magnitude earthquake struck the Noto region.STR/JIJI Press/AFP via Getty
STR/JIJI Press/AFP via Getty
The first 72 hoursin finding survivors following an earthquake are generally important, often called “the golden period,” according to experts, per theTimes.
“The situation is terribly challenging, but until those 72 hours crucial for saving lives pass, we will do our utmost to save and rescue as many people as possible with everything we have on the ground,” Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said last Thursday, perCNN.
Last week,five of six people aboard a Coast Guard plane carrying supplies for Japan’s earthquake relief were killedwhen the aircraft collided with a Japan Airlines (JAL) plane at Tokyo’s Haneda airport. Miraculously, all 379 people from JAL flight 516 safely evacuated after that plane burst into flames.
Additionally,Yomiurireported Monday that Suzu City General Hospital, which has served as a disaster base medical facility after the earthquake, had to transfer 40 percent of patients to other hospitals via helicopters and other methods of transportation due to staff fatigue and food and water shortage.
NHK reported that over 28,000 people were staying in shelters in Ishikawa Prefecture and 158 in Toyama Prefecture, adding that most of those housed in shelters were elderly. One person said via the broadcaster: “I haven’t taken a bath for a week. I can’t take a bath alone, I need someone to help me.”
source: people.com