Landslides hit Japan's Hiroshima killing 18 people
Thirteen people also missing after month's worth of rain falls overnight
TOKYO:
At least eighteen people were killed in Japan on Wednesday when landslides touched off by torrential rain slammed into the outskirts of the city of Hiroshima, including several children, police and media said.
Thirteen people were also missing, media said, after a month's worth of rain fell overnight, loosening slopes already saturated by heavy rain over the past few weeks.
"There was rain and thunder all night, beating down so hard I was scared to go outside," a resident told Fuji TV. "Great big drops. I've never seen anything like this."
Helicopters clattered overhead, lifting out survivors, as rescue workers searched through mud and piles of stones in residential areas about 5 km (3 miles) from the city center.
Those dug out of the debris included a two-year-old boy and his eleven-year-old brother, whose house was struck as they slept.
A child's red school bag, covered in mud, lay in the debris.
With land in short supply in many parts of Japan, cities often expand into mountainous areas, leaving such development vulnerable to landslides.
About 240 mm (9 inches) of rain fell in the area in the 24 hours up to Wednesday morning, record-breaking levels equivalent to a month's worth of rain in a usual August, the Meteorological Agency said.
Asphalt roads crumbled under the force of one landslide, while streams of mud cut swathes through neighborhoods, turning houses into piles of twisted wreckage.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe cut short his summer vacation to head back to Tokyo and said he would dispatch several hundred military personnel to help with rescue efforts.
Landslides killed 31 people in Hiroshima in 1999.
At least eighteen people were killed in Japan on Wednesday when landslides touched off by torrential rain slammed into the outskirts of the city of Hiroshima, including several children, police and media said.
Thirteen people were also missing, media said, after a month's worth of rain fell overnight, loosening slopes already saturated by heavy rain over the past few weeks.
"There was rain and thunder all night, beating down so hard I was scared to go outside," a resident told Fuji TV. "Great big drops. I've never seen anything like this."
Helicopters clattered overhead, lifting out survivors, as rescue workers searched through mud and piles of stones in residential areas about 5 km (3 miles) from the city center.
Those dug out of the debris included a two-year-old boy and his eleven-year-old brother, whose house was struck as they slept.
A child's red school bag, covered in mud, lay in the debris.
With land in short supply in many parts of Japan, cities often expand into mountainous areas, leaving such development vulnerable to landslides.
About 240 mm (9 inches) of rain fell in the area in the 24 hours up to Wednesday morning, record-breaking levels equivalent to a month's worth of rain in a usual August, the Meteorological Agency said.
Asphalt roads crumbled under the force of one landslide, while streams of mud cut swathes through neighborhoods, turning houses into piles of twisted wreckage.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe cut short his summer vacation to head back to Tokyo and said he would dispatch several hundred military personnel to help with rescue efforts.
Landslides killed 31 people in Hiroshima in 1999.