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sábado, 12 de março de 2011

APOCALYPSE JAPAN Day earth split apart


Nature so merciless ... blazing home among those swept away in Natori, Japan
Nature so merciless ... blazing home among those swept away in Natori, Japan

HELL on earth engulfed Japan yesterday - as a helpless world looked on.

The nation of 127million was rocked by its worst quake. Minutes later came a monster tsunami - with waves up to four storeys high.

Helicopter news crews filmed a jawdropping tide of destruction as the wall of death surged inland for miles - sweeping all before it.

Cities and towns were wiped out. Buildings that had withstood the 8.9-magnitude quake were bulldozed off their foundations like matchwood - some floating away on the 60mph tide in flames.

Wave of death ... tsunami hits Iwanuma, north Japan
Wave of death ... tsunami hits Iwanuma, north Japan

Collapsed roads split by the shaking barely 30 minutes earlier vanished under a vast inland sea.


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Terrified drivers desperate to find a way to escape stood no chance. Lorries and cars were sent cascading - piling up like discarded toys before then being sucked out to sea as the churning ocean retreated.

Thousands were feared to have perished. Last night one of Japan's iconic bullet trains was missing.


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It had been carrying hundreds of passengers. Contact was lost with three other trains. At least one had been swept off its tracks.

Please help us ... injured tended by rescuers in Tokyo
Please help us ... injured tended by rescuers in Tokyo

Three nuclear plants bore the brunt of the quake and some were then swamped - sparking fears of a meltdown.








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A dam in Japan's north-east Fukushima province collapsed, unleashing a torrent that swept away 1,800 homes.

Inferno ... oil refinery erupting in flames in Chiba city
Inferno ... oil refinery erupting in flames in Chiba city

The official death toll was 400 with 531 missing. Another 544 were injured. But emergency teams warned that was likely to spiral.

The sheer destruction was estimated to top £7billion. Tens of thousands were left homeless.

Chaos ... water sweeps over airport
Chaos ... water sweeps over airport

Japan's MPs were poised to back an emergency budget after PM Naoto Kan begged them to "save the country". Air force jets and helicopters raced to the country's devastated eastern coast along with rescue troops.

Japan Quake

The earthquake - described by experts as a "megathrust" - was a monumental 8,000 times bigger than the one that wrecked Christchurch in New Zealand last month.

It was followed by EIGHTY aftershocks - some of those massive in their own right. One registered a magnitude of 6.7. The main quake struck at 2.46pm local time, 5.46am in London.

Its epicentre was six miles beneath the seabed 80 miles off Japan's east coast. The mammoth tremor sparked a tsunami alert around the entire Pacific rim as a 30ft wall of water raced across the vast ocean at 500mph - as fast as a jetliner.

It was still 10ft high by the time it hit Hawaii - 3,900 miles away.

Evacuation plans were put into action there - and also on the US west coast which was buffeted more than 5,000 miles away. Docks were ripped out of harbours in California, with reports of damage running into millions of dollars in Crescent City. One man taking photos in Del Norte County, northern California, was missing last night after he was swept out to sea.

Two pals made it back to shore, while on the coast of Oregon at least four others survived after being swept off a beach.

The tremor was the world's fifth biggest since records began in the 1800s. It eclipsed the Great Kanto earthquake of 1923, which had a magnitude of 7.9 and killed more than 140,000 in and around Tokyo.

Shocking ... giant wall of water slams into Japan's north-eastern coast
Shocking ... giant wall of water slams into Japan's north-eastern coast
AP

This time the capital escaped the worst - although it was violently rocked for at least two minutes. Office workers scrambled to hide under desks. Modern buildings in quake-prone Japan are designed to withstand tremors but yesterday's was so ferocious it tested many to their limits - sparking panic.

Falling debris injured countless people as they swarmed into Tokyo's streets.

Blaze ... fire burns out of control at oil refinery near Tokyo
Blaze ... fire burns out of control at oil refinery near Tokyo

With public transport all but paralysed hundreds of thousands found themselves stranded. Many were forced to spend a night outdoors after finding hotels full.

But it was in and around the city of Sendai - 170 miles from Tokyo - that the real horror unfolded as the tsunami smashed into 1,300 miles of coastline.

Japan has a sophisticated tsunami alert system - but there was simply no time to warn people. Some said the wall of water hit just 15 minutes after the quake.

Heartbeaking TV footage showed people trying to outrun it - some in cars, others on foot.

Raging waters ... tsunami triggers whirlpool near a port in Oarai, on Japan's north-eastern coast
Raging waters ... tsunami triggers whirlpool near a port in Oarai, on Japan's north-eastern coast
AP

The surging sea turned into a maelstrom of wreckage and mud as it bore down on them. Boats were ripped from their moorings and sent hurtling down streets.

They mingled with bobbing cars and whole uprooted houses - some floating in flames after ruptured gas pipes exploded.

Collapse ... road couldn't withstand force of earthquake
Collapse ... road couldn't withstand force of earthquake

Around 100 people were on a vessel owned by a shipbuilder in Ishinomaki that was swept away.

Up to 300 corpses were recovered in Sendai alone.

Alone ... man stands on roof as he watches waters rage below
Alone ... man stands on roof as he watches waters rage below

Charlie Wonk, who works at the city's university, said: "I saw more than 20 dead bodies in the street. Some were kids."

Rubble ... residents walk through debris of collapsed homes
Rubble ... residents walk through debris of collapsed homes
AP

Local resident Mark Avancena said: "I thought we were going to die. There was an unusual silence, like the world had stopped, and then the earthquake started. It felt like it went on forever."

His mother Edith added: "The water entered the house with such force it broke all the windows.

"We looked at each other and started saying our goodbyes."

Debris ... cars and planes were swept away by huge waves
Debris ... cars and planes were swept away by huge waves

On the east coast of northern Honshu island, 3,000 homes were said to have been destroyed.

Hours after the impact, huge orange balls of flame rolled up into the night sky around a petrochemical complex in Sendai. Another refinery erupted in Chiba City - and a massive blaze also engulfed one in Ichihara near Tokyo. Fire crews battled at least 80 huge fires - ten in the capital where four million homes were blacked out.

Hospital staff were among those stranded on rooftops by the tsunami. They held up SOS banners with the words "Food" and "Help".

Destroyed ... houses sit under feet of water
Destroyed ... houses sit under feet of water

US worker Jarrod Lentz, 27 - who had only been in Tokyo a week - admitted he was at first excited to experience his first quake.

But he said: "It quickly escalated. It got to the point where I could no longer stand.

"I could see the concrete outside my window rippling like water. The streets cracked open and it made a very loud, very violent sound. It was surreal."

Much of Japan's industry ground to a halt. Among factories forced to shut were six owned by electronics giant Sony. The UN said 68 rescue teams from more than 45 countries were on standby. PM David Cameron said Britain was ready to do all it can to help.

He described the quake as a "terrible reminder of the destructive power of nature". US President Barack Obama said he was "heartbroken" by images of the disaster.

Damage ... tanks toppled over at brewery in Sendai as fire blazes in Tokyo building
Damage ... tanks toppled over at brewery in Sendai as fire blazes in Tokyo building
Reuters / WENN

Amid the chaos, the Foreign Office said of fears Brits were among victims: "We can't say for sure." Both the Queen and Prince Charles sent messages to Japan's Emperor Akihito. Her Majesty said she was "saddened to hear of the tragic loss of life".

Quake

Charles said he and Camilla were in "shock" - adding: "You are constantly in our thoughts and prayers at this most dreadful and challenging of times."



















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