A blistering heatwave yesterday smothered swathes of flood-hit western Japan, hampering clean-up efforts as survivors and relief workers toil in stifling temperatures a week after devastating inundations that killed more than 200 people.
Tens of thousands of rescue workers are still digging through the debris for bodies after the nation’s worst weather-related disaster in more than three decades, which saw record downpours spark flash flooding and landslides across the region.
The toll of 219 is expected to continue to rise, with at least 21 still missing, while the punishing heatwave has pushed temperatures above 35oC and raised fears for vulnerable people.
About 4,700 survivors were forced to evacuate the disaster area, where homes were reduced to rubble by the floods and landslides.
Many remain in shelters, while others have been left without water supply.
Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga warned survivors, volunteers and the 64,000 rescue workers in the disaster zone of the dangers of heatstroke.
“We are operating in tough conditions, with a severe heatwave in this region,” said Koji Kunitomi, a spokesman at the disaster management department in flood-hit Okayama Prefecture.
Sweltering summer weather has swept across Japan in recent days, sending temperatures surging just days after the record rainfall.
Japan’s meteorological agency has warned that the heat is “more severe” than normal, with temperatures in Okayama yesterday hitting a high of 36.8oC, compared with an average high of 31oC in the city.
On Sunday, local media reported that three people had died and more than 2,000 were sent to hospital across the nation due to heatstroke.
Television footage of the relief efforts in western Japan showed survivors and volunteers struggling to clear debris under the intense sun.
The body of one victim covered in a blue tarpaulin was carried from a destroyed house in Aki, Hiroshima, yesterday.
The scale of the toll from the floods has prompted questions about whether authorities were properly prepared and acted effectively.
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