In the city of Wajima alone, where the highest number of deaths was recorded as a result of the disaster, six people are still considered missing. Rescue services have received from 40 to 50 reports of collapses of buildings, under the rubble of which many people could be trapped, the local administration was cited as saying by media.
During a press conference on Thursday morning, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida one more time urged all those involved in the search operation to make "all-out effort" to find those missing as the 72-hour period crucial for rescuing people was running out, the news agency reported.
On Monday afternoon, a powerful 7.6 magnitude earthquake, followed by a series of aftershocks, struck near the city of Suzu on the Noto Peninsula in Ishikawa Prefecture. The death toll from the disaster has so far reached 78, while over 100 others were injured. The tremors also led to buildings collapsing and left more than 32,000 households without power, although no nuclear power plant failures were registered.
The earthquake on January 1, 2024, became the most powerful for the Noto Peninsula region since records began in 1885.