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Deadly earthquake rattles northern Japan

A powerful earthquake rocked rural northern Japan on Saturday, killing at least five people, injuring more than 200 and sparking landslides that sliced mountains, destroyed roads and left residents cut off.
Image: The 7.0-magnitude earthquake rocked rural areas of northern Japan
A resident looks at a road damaged by a powerful earthquake in Oshu, in Iwate prefecture, Saturday, June 14.AP
/ Source: msnbc.com staff and news service reports

A powerful earthquake rocked rural northern Japan on Saturday, killing at least five people, injuring more than 200 and sparking landslides that sliced mountains, destroyed roads and left residents cut off.

The 7.2 magnitude quake struck at 8:43 a.m. in Iwate, a sparsely populated, scenic area around 190 miles north of Tokyo, where buildings also shook.

Military helicopters swarmed the quake zone, ferrying in supplies and flying the injured to hospitals. Officials said at least 94 people were injured, and landslides trapped 100 bathers at a hot spring resort.

At a nuclear power plant in Fukushima, the jolt splashed 5 gallons of radioactive water from two pools storing spent fuel, operators said. However, Trade and Industry Ministry official Yoshinori Moriyama said there was no leakage outside the plant.

The force of the quake, which was followed by some 160 aftershocks, buckled many roads, including one highway that was severed when a stretch of land collapsed, creating a cliffside. Electricity was cut to about 29,000 households.

'Save as many lives as possible'
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda said the government was mobilizing troops, police and "everybody we possibly can" to find the missing and rescue and treat the injured.

"Our most important task is to save as many lives as possible, and we are doing the best we can," he said.

The three dead included a man who ran out of a building in fear and was hit by a passing truck, another man buried by a landslide while fishing, and a construction worker who was hit by a falling rock at a dam, officials said.

The 8:43 a.m. quake was centered in the northern state of Iwate, and was located about 5 miles underground. It was felt as far away as Tokyo.

"It shook so violently that I couldn't stand still. I had to lean on the wall," said Masanori Oikawa, an Oshu city official who was at home near the epicenter when the quake struck. "When I rushed to the office, cabinets had been thrown onto the floor and things on the desks were scattered all over the place."

"It was scary. It was difficult to stand up," said Sachiko Sugihara, a convenience store worker in Oshu in an interview with NHK. "The TV fell over and the refrigerator shook."

The quake also knocked down equipment and car parts at the Iwate factory of Kanoto Auto Works Ltd., a Toyota Motor Corp. subsidiary that assembles popular Corollas and other models, company spokeswoman Seiko Watanabe said. The company has not decided whether to resume production Monday.

Fractured road system
A semiconductor subsidiary of Fujitsu Ltd. halted production "as a precaution" but there was no major damage to the building or equipment, company spokesman Yasuhiko Youdou.

Rescuers said their top problem was the fractured road system, which stopped them from reaching isolated hamlets in the damage zone.

"We're getting growing reports of damage, but we can't even get out there to assess the situation with roads closed off because of landslides," said Norio Sato, a city official in one of the hardest-hit towns, Kurihara.

In that town, a landslide buried 15 construction workers. Twelve managed to dig themselves out, but three were still missing. Four people at Komanoyu hot springs were also missing after a separate landslide hit the resort, said another city official, Katsuyuki Sato.

The Defense Ministry dispatched a dozen helicopters and patrol aircraft to the region to assess the extent of damage. The government also sent a CH-47 helicopter carrying Disaster Minister Shinya Izumi to the region.

Local governors were asking for more troops.


Footage shot from media helicopters showed landslides on rural roads running along knots of mountains separated by long stretches of rice fields. Videos aired on public broadcaster NHK also showed a bridge that collapsed. NHK said four people were seriously injured while riding in a bus on a bridge when the quake hit, but it was unclear whether it was the same one.

Videos from the closest large city, Sendai, showed the force of the quake shook surveillance cameras for 30 seconds. Still, Sendai appeared largely unscathed.

"So far we have not received any reports of damage or injuries. Everything is normal," Hideki Hara, a police official in Sendai, told the AP. "Phone lines, water and electricity are all working right now."

Japan is one of the most earthquake-prone areas in the world. The most recent major quake in Japan killed more than 6,400 people in the city of Kobe in January 1995.