More than 50 people are still missing after landslides engulfed homes on the outskirts of Hiroshima in western Japan. The death toll currently stands at 39, but 52 people have been reported missing, possibly more than doubling the death toll.
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Japanese soldiers dig for bodies buried in the mud after a landslide swept through a residential area in Hiroshima(Reuters)
(Reuters)
Hillsides caved in or were swept down into residential areas in at least five valleys in the suburbs of the western Japanese city on Wednesday, crushing dozens of houses after heavy rains.
About 2,500 police and military personnel are searching for the missing in the mud-covered areas.
Rescue workers search for bodies with rescue dogs(Reuters)
A dog and rescue workers search victims in collapsed houses(AFP)
(AFP)
(Reuters)
(Reuters)
Police officers move to higher ground after an announcement to evacuate because of the risk of another landslide(Reuters)
Heavy rain delayed a search on Friday, and rescue workers fear the continuing rain could set off further landslides. A month's rain fell in one night on Wednesday, loosening slopes already saturated by heavy rain over the past few weeks. About 240mm (nine inches) of rain fell in the 24 hours up to Wednesday morning, the Meterological Agency said. Roughly half of that rain fell in one hour.
(Reuters)
Defence personnel search through the mud for victims, two days after a landslide hit a residential area in Hiroshima(AFP)
(Reuters)
(Reuters)
(AFP)
(Reuters)
(AFP)
Among those killed were two brothers, aged 11 and 2, and a firefighter who was engulfed by mud as he was carrying a toddler to safety. The child also perished.
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