TOKYO, Japan
The death toll reached 202 in the central Japanese prefecture of Ishikawa as of Tuesday afternoon after a series of earthquakes of up to 7.6 magnitude struck the prefecture and its vicinity, local media reported.
A total of 102 people remained
unaccounted for in the hardest-hit prefecture as of 2 p.m. local time, while at
least 565 people suffered injuries due to the quakes, the public broadcaster
NHK said.
Local police have carried out
a large-scale search for the missing people in Wajima City, near the quake's
epicenter, where a massive fire in the city center destroyed more than 200
buildings in an area of 48,000 square meters, the report said.
According to the prefectural
government, at least 3,300 people, primarily in Wajima and the adjacent city of
Suzu, remain isolated due to severed roads and heavy snowfall, with the
recovery of electricity, water supply, and other infrastructure still unclear.
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's
government on Tuesday approved the allocation of 4.74 billion yen (about 33
million U.S. dollars) from reserve funds in the fiscal 2023 budget to support
the victims of the Noto Peninsula quake, including measures to help those
affected cope with the cold weather.
Defense Minister Minoru Kihara
said Tuesday that the number of Self-Defense Forces personnel taking part in
rescue operations had increased by around 200 to roughly 6,300.
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