'Shocked' residents assess flood damage
Houses lean forward, knocked partially off their foundations. The worst-hit are gone, their still-intact blue-tiled roofs left sitting on debris-strewn mud. The floodwaters have receded somewhat, but a vast area of the Japanese city of Joso remains inundated by a sea of brown water.
As the sun came out on Friday, shocked residents and officials began to take stock of the damage wrought the previous day when a rain-swollen river burst through its eastern bank, pouring in water so rapidly that many people could only clamber upstairs or to their roofs to escape.
"We survived but it looks like some of our soybeans and rice didn't," said Keiko Iita, 70, who spent the night with her husband and son on the second floor of their house.
She wore gloves and covered her face with a towel as she helped clean a neighbor's mud-coated barn. Farmers were clearing the mess in their fields and assessing the damage to their flattened soybean plants and other crops.
Two days of torrential rain caused flooding and landslides across much of Japan this week. At least two people died: a woman in her 60s who was found after a landslide hit houses in Kanuma, and a woman in her 40s who was in a car that washed away in Kurihara.
About 300 kilometers north of Joso, another river overflowed into the city of Osaki on Friday morning, swamping homes and fields and stranding at least 60 people, according to media reports.
But the hardest-hit place appeared to be Joso, 50 kilometers northeast of Tokyo. The fast-rising waters in the city of 60,000 people led to a series of dramatic rescues by helicopters on Thursday.
Police and other emergency workers fanned out the next morning to search for the missing, while helicopters and boats brought in more of the stranded. More than 280 people have been airlifted out since the serious flooding began.
City officials said 22 people were missing after authorities had lost contact with them following requests for rescue. Three others were injured, one seriously. More than 3,500 people were staying in schools and other buildings converted to evacuation centers.
Hisako Sekimoto, 62, spent a sleepless night on the second floor of her flooded house with her husband and three cats before they were rescued by a military helicopter early Friday. Minutes after the flood gushed into the house Thursday afternoon, all of their furniture was floating and the water was up to her neck.
"There was no time to escape, all we could do was go upstairs. It was horrifying," she said.