Huge
tsunami kills hundreds in Japan, sweeps across Pacific
Friday,
March 11, 2011
TOKYO: The biggest earthquake on record to
hit Japan rocked the northeast coast on Friday, triggering a 10-metre tsunami
that killed hundreds of people and swept away everything in its path, including
houses, ships and cars.
The
Red Cross in Geneva said the wall of water was higher than some Pacific islands
and a tsunami warning was issued for almost the entire Pacific basin, although
alerts were lifted for some countries, including Taiwan, Australia and New
Zealand.
Up
to 300 bodies were found in the coastal city of Sendai, media said. NHK
television said the victims appeared to have drowned. The extent of the
destruction along a lengthy stretch of coastline suggested the death toll could
rise significantly.
Some
3,000 residents living near a nuclear plant in Fukushima prefecture, north of
Tokyo, were told to evacuate but the government said no radiation was leaking.
It said the evacuation was a precaution after a reactor cooling malfunction.
Other
nuclear power plants and oil refineries were shut down after the 8.9 magnitude
quake, while one refinery was ablaze. A major explosion hit a petrochemical
complex in Miyagi prefecture after the quake, Kyodo said.
Political
leaders pushed for an emergency budget to help fund relief efforts after Prime
Minister Naoto Kan asked them to "save the country", Kyodo news
agency reported.
Stunning
TV footage showed a muddy wall of water carrying cars and wrecked homes at high
speed across farmland near Sendai, home to one million people and which lies
300 km (180 miles) northeast of Tokyo. Ships had been flung onto a harbour
wharf, where they lay helplessly on their side.
The
quake, the most powerful since Japan started keeping records 140 years ago,
sparked at least 80 fires in cities and towns along the coast, Kyodo news
agency said.
A
ship carrying 100 people had been swept away by the tsunami, Kyodo said. One
train was unaccounted for.
In
Tokyo, residents who had earlier fled swaying buildings jammed the streets
trying to make their way home after much of the city's public transportation
was shut down.
Electronics
giant Sony Corp , one of the country's biggest exporters, shut six factories,
as air force jets raced toward the northeast coast to determine the extent of
the damage.
The
Bank of Japan, which has been struggling to boost the anaemic economy, said it
would do its utmost to ensure financial market stability as the yen and
Japanese shares fell.
"I
was terrified and I'm still frightened," said Hidekatsu Hata, 36, manager
of a Chinese noodle restaurant in Tokyo, where buildings shook violently.
"I've never experienced such a big quake before."
The
tsunami alerts revived memories of the giant waves which struck Asia in 2004.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued alerts for countries to the west and
across the Pacific as far away as Colombia and Peru.
The
earthquake was the fifth most powerful to hit the world in the past century.
There
were several strong aftershocks. In Tokyo, there was widespread panic. An oil
refinery near the city was on fire, with dozens of storage tanks under threat.
Around
4.4 million homes were without power in northern Japan, media said.
"People
are flooding the streets. It's incredible. Everyone is trying to get home but I
didn't see any taxis," said Koji Goto, a 43-year-old Tokyo resident.
NHK
television showed flames and black smoke billowing from a building in Odaiba, a
Tokyo suburb, and bullet trains to the north of the country were halted. Thick
smoke was also pouring out of an industrial area in Yokohama's Isogo area. TV
showed residents of the city running out of shaking buildings, shielding their
heads with their hands from falling masonry.
TV
footage showed boats, cars and trucks tossed around like toys in the water
after a small tsunami hit the town of Kamaichi in northern Japan. An overpass,
location unknown, appeared to have collapsed and cars were turning around and
speeding away.
"The
building shook for what seemed a long time and many people in the newsroom
grabbed their helmets and some got under their desks," Reuters
correspondent Linda Sieg said in Tokyo. "It was probably the worst I have
felt since I came to Japan more than 20 years ago."
The
U.S. navy said its ships had been unaffected by the tsunami and were ready to
provide disaster relief if needed.
China
offered to provide earthquake relief.
The
quake struck just before the Tokyo stock market closed, pushing the Nikkei down
to end at a five-week low. Nikkei futures trading in Osaka tumbled as much as
4.7 percent in reaction to the news.
The
disaster also weighed on markets elsewhere.
GREAT
KANTO QUAKE
The
quake surpasses the Great Kanto quake of Sept. 1, 1923, which had a magnitude
of 7.9 and killed more than 140,000 people in the Tokyo area.
The
1995 Kobe quake caused $100 billion in damage and was the most expensive
natural disaster in history. Economic damage from the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
was estimated at about $10 billion.
Passengers
on a subway line in Tokyo screamed and grabbed other passengers' hands during
the quake. The shaking was so bad it was hard to stand, said Reuters reporter
Mariko Katsumura.
Hundreds
of office workers and shoppers spilled into Hitotsugi street, a shopping street
in Akasaka in downtown Tokyo.
Crowds
gathered in front of televisions in a shop next to the drugstore for details.
After the shaking from the first quake subsided, crowds watched and pointed to
construction cranes on an office building up the street with voices saying,
"They're still shaking!", "Are they going to fall?"
Japan's
northeast Pacific coast, called Sanriku, has suffered from quakes and tsunamis
in the past and a 7.2 quake struck on Wednesday. In 1933, a magnitude 8.1 quake
in the area killed more than 3,000 people.
Earthquakes
are common in Japan, one of the world's most seismically active areas. The
country accounts for about 20 percent of the world's earthquakes of magnitude 6
or greater.
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