Boy continues lonely search for family members

)photo

 "I will come again tomorrow," reads one of the messages Toshihito Aisawa, 9, wrote to his family and cousins who have been missing since the tsunami hit Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture. (Kuniaki Nishio)

photo

 Toshihito Aisawa holds up signs with the names of his family and cousins at an evacuation center in Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, on Tuesday. (Kuniaki Nishio)

 

    ISHINOMAKI, Miyagi Prefecture--Quake evacuees give sympathetic looks to a boy who has become a familiar face at evacuation centers in this city ravaged by last Friday's quake and tsunami.

But sadly, they cannot offer any information about the names on the handwritten signs he holds up at each center.

The names are of the father, mother, grandmother and two cousins of 9-year-old Toshihito Aisawa. The last time he saw his family members, they were trying to escape from a car being swept away by the massive wall of water.

On Tuesday, Toshihito visited Kadowaki Junior High School, home to about 2,000 evacuees, for the fourth time since last Friday.

He also visited another junior high school and a high school. But no one could provide information to Toshihito that day.

According to the third-year elementary school student, his father, Kazuyuki, picked him up at his school soon after the magnitude-9.0 earthquake hit.

Packed in a minicar, Toshihito, Kazuyuki, grandmother Kyoko, mother Noriko, and two cousins, Yuto and Yuna Shima, headed for Kadowaki Junior High School located on a hill in central Ishinomaki.

As they sped down a trunk road along the port that would take them to the hill, his mother noticed the tsunami bearing down on them.

"A tsunami's coming. Head left, left!" Toshihito recalled his mother screaming, as the wave that seemed much taller than the car loomed outside.

His father tried to escape the roaring water, but the car became stuck in a parking lot. Then the seawater swallowed the vehicle.

Toshihito recalled hearing all sorts of things smashing against the car. The window cracked, and on the spur of the moment, he broke the glass with his bare hands. Grabbing the hand of Yuto, a first-year junior high school student, Toshihito managed to crawl out of the window.

"But then something, probably a tree, came crashing through, and I had to let go," Toshihito said.

He said the voices of Yuto calling to him and his grandmother pleading for help gradually became distant.

The boy soon lost consciousness. When he came to about 30 minutes later, his body was strewn on a piece of wood and parts of his clothes were caught on a bamboo branch.

A man fished him out of the water and gave the boy some clothes.

Toshihito was taken to the family of Mitsunari Kitahara, 64, a barbershop owner with whom Toshihito's family was acquainted.

"Stop worrying so much. Come back home as soon as you can," Kitahara repeatedly told the boy.

"Yes, I'll do as you say. I won't worry about it," Toshihito said, although his face betrayed his show of bravery.

Much of the city center remains under water. But Toshihito is determined to find his family.

"When the roads clear up, I'm going to check our home," he said. 

 

Please Donate to the Red Cross Relief Efforts in Japan at: http://www.RedCross.org

Filed under  //  9   boy   buy and hold   cross   donate   earthquake   japan   miyagi   parents   red   save   year  
Posted by Bryan Hays 

Killer Tohoku temblor tops scale at 8.8 in Japan. Scores Dead. May be worst on record. Public transportation at standstill in many areas. Power down in some of Japan's Coldest Areas

Friday, March 11, 2011

News photo
Mother Nature's wrath: A wide, debris-clogged tsunami swamps a residential area near the Natori River in Miyagi Prefecture following an 8.8-magnitude temblor off northern Japan on Friday afternoon. KYODO PHOTO

Killer Tohoku temblor tops scale

Tsunami slam widespread areas; fires rage; initial death toll at 32

Kyodo News

An earthquake with a historic magnitude of 8.8 rocked the Tohoku region Friday, triggering tsunami that wiped away cars, ships and buildings all along the east coast.

News photo
Smoke and flames billow from a Cosmo Oil refinery in Ichihara, Chiba Prefecture, later in the afternoon following a quake-triggered explosion. KYODO PHOTO

The massive quake was felt strongest in Miyagi Prefecture, where it came in at 7, the maximum reading on the Japanese seismic intensity scale, the Meteorological Agency said.

Police said at least 32 people died across an extensive area of eastern Japan ranging from Iwate and Miyagi prefectures in the northeast to Tokyo. The 2:46 p.m. quake also set off fires at scores of locations, as well as a huge refinery inferno in Chiba Prefecture.

The quake was felt hundreds of kilometers away, including in Tokyo, where buildings swayed for a long time and people swarmed out of them.

The temblor is the strongest ever to hit the quake-prone archipelago, the Meteorological Agency said, with a magnitude surpassing the 7.9 registered in the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake in Tokyo and its vicinity, which left more than 140,000 people dead.

The quake struck at a depth of around 10 km and originated 130 km east-southeast in the Pacific off the coast of the Ojika Peninsula in Sendai, the agency said.

The agency issued a rare warning for a huge tsunami for the Pacific coastal region from Hokkaido to Tokushima Prefecture.

The agency also called for the public to stay alert over the next month for aftershocks that could register magnitude 7 or more and trigger more tsunami.

A 10-meter tsunami was observed at Sendai port at around 3:55 p.m., police said.

A wide, muddy stream was seen moving rapidly across a residential area near the Natori River in Sendai on live TV coverage by NHK, leveling everything in its path, while other coverage showed about 20 cars being washed into the sea when a tsunami hit Kamaishi port.

At least two Japan Coast Guard patrol boats from the 2nd Coast Guard Regional Headquarters in Shiogama were washed away by the tsunami, coast guard officials said.

The runways at Sendai airport were also submerged.

Fire authorities in Miyagi's Kesennuma said a number of buildings, including houses, were seriously damaged by the quake.

A 7.3-meter-high tsunami hit Soma port in Sendai and elsewhere, the agency said, adding a 4.1-meter tsunami was observed in Kamaishi port in Iwate Prefecture.

Residential areas in several areas were flooded and scores of vehicles, boats and a storage tank were washed away by tsunami.

Fire authorities in Miyagi's Kesennuma area said a number of buildings, including houses, were seriously damaged by the quake.

According to Tohoku Electric Power Co., power outages hit Aomori, Akita and Iwate prefectures and most of Miyagi and Yamagata prefectures. Part of Fukushima and Niigata prefectures also were blacked out, the utility said.

Self-Defense Forces personnel were immediately dispatched to Miyagi Prefecture following a request from Gov. Yoshihiro Murai.

All ships docked at the Maritime Self-Defense Force's base in Yokosuka, Kanagawa Prefecture, were deployed off Miyagi, and eight fighter jets took off from four bases of the Air Self-Defense Force to check the quake damage.

There were unconfirmed reports that bridges collapsed in Saitama and Iwate prefectures, while the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry received no immediate reports of abnormalities at nuclear plants in the areas hit by the quake.

The quake also caused an emergency cooling system at the No. 1 reactor of the Fukushima No. 2 nuclear power plant to be activated, the industry ministry said.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. notified the ministry of the move, the ministry said, adding that monitors outside the facility have detected no abnormalities.

The Onagawa nuclear power plant in Miyagi Prefecture automatically halted operations. Its operator, Tohoku Electric Power Co., was checking whether it suffered any damage.

The quake affected key transportation systems, including Narita International Airport, which shut down its runways for safety checks. The airport instructed passengers to withdraw from the terminals.

Haneda airport in Tokyo initially closed all of its runways for safety checks, but reopened and gave priority to arriving planes.

There were no immediate reports of bullet trains derailing, which in the Tohoku region are operated by East Japan Railway Co. All shinkansen services were stopped, JR East said.

Cell phone services were halted in various parts of Japan. NTT Communications reported that long-distance telephone calls on land lines, as well as international calls, had difficult connections.

Meanwhile, in Tokyo, the Metropolitan Police Department said many people were injured when part of the Kudan Kaikan hall in Chiyoda Ward collapsed. Several fires were reported.

The metropolitan government said it shut 19 floodgates to gird for possible tsunami.

Fires were reported across wide area, including at an ironworks in Chiba Prefecture. An explosion hit a Cosmo Oil refinery in Chiba Prefecture, where one person was reported severely injured, and two others experienced minor injuries.

In Takahagi, Ibaraki Prefecture, a woman died when a roof collapsed at a massage parlor after the quake, and another fatality was reported in Haga, Tochigi Prefecture, when a factory wall collapsed.

A 67-year-old man died after being hit in the head by part of a stone wall in Chiba Prefecture, while a woman in her 50s died from injuries inflicted when part of the roof of a hall collapsed in Tokyo.

Filed under  //  8.8   death   earthquake   kashiwa   killer   miyagi   prefecture   sendai   temblor   tohoku   toll   tsunami  
Posted by Bryan Hays