Japan opens prison to shelter quake evacuees

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MASHIKI, Japan: Japan has resorted to opening a prison to those left homeless by two deadly earthquakes, officials said Tuesday, highlighting the challenges of dealing with tens of thousands who have fled their homes.

Two major earthquakes and about 600 smaller tremors have rocked the southwestern island of Kyushu since late Thursday, leaving a total of 46 people dead and more than 1,000 injured — 208 of them seriously — in Japan’s worst humanitarian disaster in five years.

Many who abandoned their damaged or destroyed homes have had to sleep in temporary accommodation, huddle in makeshift shelters or even sleep in their cars, and local media have reported problems in delivering food and other essentials as well as raising health concerns.

More than 95,000 people were still in evacuation shelters, a spokeswoman for the Kumamoto prefectural government, told AFP, about 20,000 less than earlier in the day. The figure does not include those staying with friends or family or in places other than official shelters.

Justice Ministry official Koichi Shima told AFP that a prison in the hard-hit city of Kumamoto has accommodated as many as 250 people at a time in the correctional facility’s martial arts training hall.

About 110 people were staying there on Tuesday alongside nearly 500 inmates, he added.

The ministry decided to start using prison facilities as evacuation centres after a huge undersea quake in March 2011 killed around 18,500 people when it sent a devastating tsunami barrelling into the northeast coast, sparking a nuclear meltdown disaster.

“This is the first time that the policy has been put into practice,” Shima said.

An initial quake on Thursday, measured at 6.2 magnitude by US geologists, affected older buildings and killed nine people. But Saturday’s more powerful 7.0-magnitude tremor and an ensuing landslide brought even newer structures crashing down.