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Monday, March 14, 2011

Death Toll Estimate in Japan Soars as Relief Efforts Intensify

Toshiyuki Tsunenari/Asahi Shimbun, via Associated Press
The scene in Natori, Japan, reflected the paralysis across the county on Sunday. “If the nation works together, we will overcome,” the prime minister said. More Photos »
By MARTIN FACKLER and MARK McDONALD
Published: March 13, 2011
SENDAI, Japan — Japan reeled from a rapidly unfolding disaster of epic scale on Sunday, pummeled by the death toll, destruction and homelessness caused by the earthquake and tsunami and new hazards from damaged nuclear reactors that were leaking radiation. The prime minister called it Japan’s worst crisis since World War II.
Multimedia
Photographs
The Aftermath in Japan
Interactive Feature
Satellite Photos of Japan, Before and After the Quake and Tsunami
Interactive Map
Map of the Damage From the Japanese Earthquake
Slide Show
Paralysis Across Japan
Widespread Devastation in Japan
Widespread Devastation in Japan
Close Video
See More Videos »
Amateur Video of Tsunami
Amateur Video of Tsunami
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Photographs Are You at the Scene? Send In Your Photos
NYTimes.com is compiling photographs from readers in the region affected by the earthquake and tsunami.
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Related

  • The Lede Blog: Latest Updates on Earthquake Aftermath in Japan (March 13, 2011)
  • Second Explosion at Reactor as Technicians Try to Contain Damage (March 14, 2011)
  • For Neighbor of Stricken Nuclear Plant, Second Thoughts About a Centerpiece (March 14, 2011)
  • Seawalls Offered Little Protection Against Tsunami’s Crushing Waves (March 14, 2011)
  • At Sendai City Hall, a Relief Center, Thousands Wait and Wonder What’s Next (March 14, 2011)
  • Stocks in Japan Plunge as Investors Worry (March 14, 2011)
  • The Lede Blog: Japan Earthquake and Tsunami: How to Help (March 11, 2011)

Related in Opinion

  • Room For Debate: Japan's Nuclear Crisis: Lessons for the U.S.
  • Crisis Points: An Unpredictable Test of Japan's Resilience (March 11, 2011)
    Crisis Points: In Tokyo, the Search for Solid Ground (March 11, 2011)
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Enlarge This Image
Kyodo/Reuters
The streets in Ishimaki City, Japan, were still flooded on Sunday. The government ordered 100,000 troops to take part in the relief effort — nearly half the country’s active military force.
Japan’s $5 trillion economy, the third largest in the world, was threatened with severe disruptions and partial paralysis as many industries shut down and the armed forces and volunteers mobilized for the far more urgent effort of finding survivors, evacuating residents near the stricken power plants and caring for the victims of the 8.9 magnitude quake that struck on Friday. 

The disaster has left more than 10,000 people dead, many thousands homeless and millions without water, power, heat or transportation. 

The most urgent worries concerned the failures at two reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, where engineers were still struggling to avert meltdowns and where some radiation had already leaked. An explosion at one of the reactors on Monday did not appear to have harmed it, Japanese officials said. 

Fukushima Daiichi and another power station, Fukushima Daiini, about 10 miles away, have been under a state of emergency since the quake. The collective anxiety about Japan caused a rout in the Japanese stock market on Monday morning, with the main index falling 5.5 percent, the worst drop in three years. 

Worried about the severe strains on the banking and financial systems, the Bank of Japan pumped about $86 billion into the economy on Monday, and the government was discussing an emergency tax increase to help finance relief and recovery work. 

The Tokyo Electric Power Company, which operates the country’s crippled nuclear power grid, announced a series of rotating blackouts to conserve electricity — the first controlled power cuts in Japan in 60 years. 

The death toll was certain to climb as searchers began to reach coastal villages that essentially vanished under the first muddy surge of the tsunami, which struck the nation’s northern Pacific coast near the port city of Sendai. In one town alone, the port of Minamisanriku, a senior police official said the number of dead would “certainly be more than 10,000.” That is more than half the town’s population of 17,000. 

Prime Minister Naoto Kan told a news conference in Tokyo late Sunday: “I think that the earthquake, tsunami and the situation at our nuclear reactors makes up the worst crisis in the 65 years since the war. If the nation works together, we will overcome.”
The government ordered 100,000 troops — nearly half the country’s active military force and the largest mobilization in postwar Japan — to take part in the relief effort. An American naval strike group led by the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan also arrived off Japan on Sunday to help with refueling, supply and rescue duties. 

The quake and tsunami did not reach Japan’s industrial heartland, although economists said the power blackouts could affect industrial production — notably carmakers, electronics manufacturers and steel plants — and interrupt the nation’s famously efficient supply chain. Tourism was also bound to plummet, as the United States, France and other nations urged citizens to avoid traveling to Japan.
AIR Worldwide, a risk consultant in Boston, said its disaster models estimated property damage to be as high as $35 billion. The company said 70 percent of residential construction in Japan was wood, and earthquake insurance was not widely used.  

Amid the despair and the worry over an unrelenting series of strong aftershocks, there was one bright moment when the Japanese Navy rescued a 60-year-old man who had been floating at sea for two days. 

The man, Hiromitsu Arakawa, clung to the roof of his tiny home in the town of Minamisoma after it was torn from its foundations by the first wave of the tsunami, the Defense Ministry said. He saw his wife slip away in the deluge, but he hung on as the house drifted away. He was discovered late Sunday morning, still on his roof, nine miles south of the town and nine miles out to sea. 

The quake was the strongest to hit Japan, which sits astride the “ring of fire” that designates the most violent seismic activity in the Pacific Basin. 

About 80,000 people were ordered to evacuate danger zones around the two compromised atomic facilities in Fukushima Prefecture. Japanese officials reported that 22 people showed signs of radiation exposure and as many as 170 were feared to have been exposed, including some who had been outside one of the plants waiting to be evacuated. Three workers were suffering what officials described as full-blown radiation sickness.
Enlarge This Image
Toru Hanai/Reuters
Workers removed a body in Rikuzentakata on Sunday. The death toll was expected to grow. More Photos »
Multimedia
Photographs
The Aftermath in Japan
Interactive Feature
Satellite Photos of Japan, Before and After the Quake and Tsunami
Interactive Map
Map of the Damage From the Japanese Earthquake
Slide Show
Paralysis Across Japan
Widespread Devastation in Japan
Widespread Devastation in Japan
Close Video
See More Videos »
Amateur Video of Tsunami
Amateur Video of Tsunami
Close Video
See More Videos »
Photographs Are You at the Scene? Send In Your Photos
NYTimes.com is compiling photographs from readers in the region affected by the earthquake and tsunami.
  • Photographs Send Photos

Related

  • The Lede Blog: Latest Updates on Earthquake Aftermath in Japan (March 13, 2011)
  • Second Explosion at Reactor as Technicians Try to Contain Damage (March 14, 2011)
  • For Neighbor of Stricken Nuclear Plant, Second Thoughts About a Centerpiece (March 14, 2011)
  • Seawalls Offered Little Protection Against Tsunami’s Crushing Waves (March 14, 2011)
  • At Sendai City Hall, a Relief Center, Thousands Wait and Wonder What’s Next (March 14, 2011)
  • Stocks in Japan Plunge as Investors Worry (March 14, 2011)
  • The Lede Blog: Japan Earthquake and Tsunami: How to Help (March 11, 2011)

Related in Opinion

  • Room For Debate: Japan's Nuclear Crisis: Lessons for the U.S.
  • Crisis Points: An Unpredictable Test of Japan's Resilience (March 11, 2011)
    Crisis Points: In Tokyo, the Search for Solid Ground (March 11, 2011)
    Crisis Points: The Internet Kept Me Company (March 11, 2011

The Japan Railways Group cut operations at six of its commuters lines and two bullet trains to 20 percent of normal to conserve electricity. 

Tokyo and central Japan continued to be struck by aftershocks off the eastern coast of Honshu Island. A long tremor registering 6.2 caused buildings in central Tokyo to sway dramatically on Sunday morning. 

Search teams from more than a dozen nations were bound for Japan, including a unit from New Zealand, which suffered a devastating quake last month in Christchurch. A Japanese team that had been working in New Zealand was called home. 

A combined search squad from Los Angeles County and Fairfax County, Va., arrived from the United States with 150 people and a dozen dogs that would help in the search for bodies. 

Assistance teams were also expected from China and South Korea, two of Japan’s most bitter rivals. 

Tokyo’s acceptance of help — along with a parade of senior officials who offered updates at televised news conferences on Sunday — was in marked contrast to the government’s policies after the 1995 Kobe earthquake, which killed more than 6,000 people. Japan refused most offers of aid at the time, restricted foreign aid operations and offered little information about the disaster.
Here in Sendai, a city of roughly a million people near the center of the catastrophe, many buildings cracked but none had collapsed. Still, city officials said that more than 500,000 households and businesses were without water, and many more lacked electricity as well. 

Soldiers surrounded Sendai’s city hall, where officials were using two floors to shelter evacuees and treat the injured, using power drawn from a generator. Thousands of residents sought refuge inside and waited anxiously for word from their relatives. A line of people waited outside with plastic bottles and buckets in hand to collect water from a pump. 

Masaki Kokubum, 35, has been living at the city hall since the quake. He had worked at a supermarket, and his neighborhood lost power and water. He said he had not slept in three days. 

“I can’t sleep,” he said as he sat in a chair in a hallway. “I just sit here and wait.”

Posted by Unknown at 8:59 AM
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  • I felt raped by Brando by LINA DAS Last updated at 22:45 19 July 2007
    As the star of Last Tango In Paris, Maria Schneider took part in the most infamous sex scene ever. In this rare interview she reveals the d...
  • READER RESPONSE FORUM 03-2001
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    How Stable Is Saudi Arabia? Introduction Reuters Anti-riot police facing off with protesters in Qatif...
  • February 9, 2011, 9:00 pm Mergers & Acquisitions German Börse in Talks to Buy the Big Board
    By MICHAEL J. DE LA MERCED and JACK EWING Marius Becker/DPA, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images Traders at the Frankfurt Stock Excha...
  • Page 1 of 2 DISPATCHES FROM AMERICA The urge to surge: The US's 30-year high By Tom Engelhardt If, as 2011 begins, you want to peer into the future, enter my time machine, strap yourself in, and head for the past, that laboratory for all developments of our moment and beyond. Just as 2010 ended, the American military's urge to surge resurfaced in a significant way. It seems that "leaders" in the Obama administration and "senior American military commanders" in Afghanistan were acting as a veritable WikiLeaks machine. They slipped information to New York Times reporters Mark Mazzetti and Dexter Filkins about secret planning to increase pressure in the Pakistani tribal borderlands, possibly on the tinderbox province of Baluchistan, and undoubtedly on the Pakistani government and military via cross-border raids by US Special Operations forces in the new year. In the front-page story those two reporters produced, you could practically slice with a dull knife American military frustration over a war going terribly wrong, over an enemy (shades of Vietnam!) with "sanctuaries" for rest, recuperation, and rearming just over an ill-marked, half-existent border. You could practically taste the chagrin of the military that their war against... well you name it: terrorists, guerrillas, former Islamic fundamentalist allies, Afghan and Pakistani nationalists, and god knows who else... wasn't proceeding exactly swimmingly. You could practically reach out and be seared by their anger at the Pakistanis for continuing to take American bucks by the billions while playing their own game, rather than an American one, in the region . If you were of a certain age, you could practically feel (shades of Vietnam again!) that eerily hopeful sense that the next step in spreading the war, the next escalation, could be the decisive one. Admittedly, these days no one talks (as they did in the Vietnam and Iraq years) about turning "corners" or reaching "tipping points," but you can practically hear those phrases anyway, or at least the mingled hope and desperation that always lurked behind them. Take this sentence, for instance: "Even with the risks, military commanders say that using American Special Operations troops could bring an intelligence windfall, if militants were captured, brought back across the border into Afghanistan and interrogated." Can't you catch the familiar conviction that, when things are going badly, the answer is never "less," always "more," that just another decisive step or two and you'll be around that fateful corner? In this single New York Times piece (and other hints about cross-border operations), you can sense just how addictive war is for the war planners. Once you begin down the path of invasion and occupation, turning back is as difficult as an addict going cold turkey. With all the sober talk about year-end reviews in Afghanistan, about planning and "progress" (a word used nine times in the relatively brief, vetted "overview" of that review recently released by the White House), about future dates for drawdowns and present tactics, it's easy to forget that war is a drug.
        South Asia      Jan 7, 2011 ...

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