Death toll is 81, dozens missing after torrential rains in Japan

IANS  |  Tokyo 

The death toll has risen to 81 after record torrential rains pummelled wide swathes of since Thursday, triggering landslides and flooding, the media reported on Sunday.

Of the 78 people confirmed dead, 35 were in prefecture which was hit hardest by the heavy rain and landslides, 20 in prefecture, while people were also reported dead in the prefectures of Fukuoka, Kyoto, Okayama, Gifu, Kochi, Shiga, Hyogo, and in western and southwestern Japan, said

Some 54,000 members of the police, fire departments, Self-Defence Forces and the Coast Guard have been involved in for the people trapped or wounded in landslides and flooding triggered by the heavy rain.

By Sunday evening, 2.5 million people in 15 prefectures were still under evacuation orders.

According to Japan's Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, the record rain had caused land disasters such as landslides at 201 locations in 28 of Japan's 47 prefectures.

The Meteorological Agency (JMA) said an active seasonal rain front had been causing torrential rain in most eastern and western regions of Japan since Thursday.

The agency has warned that Japan's Kinki region, which includes Kyoto, and prefectures, could be particularly hard-hit by the downpour, escalating the risk of floods, landslides, lightning and tornadoes.

Rivers from Hokkaido to have been reported as running above flood warning levels and the weather agency has warned of further landslides possibly being triggered by the record-levels of rainfall.

have been severely disrupted since Thursday, with Shinkansen partially suspended in most parts of and major arterial highways partially closed.

Manufacturing was also hit hard by the heavy downpour and flooding, as major carmakers such as and and manufacturer such as suspending operations at some plants in

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, July 08 2018. 20:10 IST