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KURASHIKI, Japan – Japan struggles to recover from the worst weather disaster in the world at least 36 years ago at least 155 people, with rescuers kept up a grim search for

 A local resident walks in a flooded area in Mabi town in Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture, Japan, July 10, 2018. REUTERS / Issei Kato / Manila Bulletin

A local resident walks in a flooded area in Mabi town in Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture, Japan, July 10, 2018. REUTERS / Issei Kato / Manila Bulletin

Torrential rain unleashed floods and landslides in western Japan last week, bringing death and destruction, especially to neighborhoods.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, has died in the face of the dead. made the rounds on Twitter showing him and the defense minister at a diner with lawmakers last Thursday, just as the rain was worsening.

Abe has seen his support rates rebound after slumping over a cronyism scandal and is keen to prevent any declines (1965 Fahrenheit) in some of the hardest- (1965 Fahrenheit)

Power had been restored to all but 3,500 people but more than 200,000 people hit areas, such as the city of Kurashiki.

"There have been requests for setting up air conditioners at the same time, and at the same time we need to restore felines, "Finance Minister Taro Aso told reporters after a cabinet meeting.

Roads caked in dried mud threw up clouds of dust

" It was close. If we had been five minutes later, we would have made it, "said Yusuke Suwa, who was traveling with his wife early on Saturday when an evacuation order came after midnight.

" It was dark and we could not see clearly what was happening, although we knew it was running outside. We did not realize it was becoming such a big deal. "

A quarter of flood-prone Mabi district of Kurashiki, sandwiched between two rivers, was inundated after a levee crumbled under the force of the torrent.

The government has set aside 70 trillion yen ($ 631 million) in infrastructure funds with 350 trillion yen ($ 3.15 trillion) in reserve, Aso said, adding that an extra budget would be needed if needed.

"When necessary amounts firm up … we would

Japan issues weather warnings early, but its dense population means that almost every bit of usable land, including some flood plains, is built on the most mountainous country, leaving it was prone to disasters.

'Decades Without Disaster'

Some residents of Mabi had shrugged off the warnings of the area's history of floods.

"We had evacuation orders before and nothing happened, so I just thought This is going to be the same, "said Kenji Ishii, 57, who stayed at home with his wife and son.

But they were soon marooned by rising flood waters and a military boat had to pluck them from the second floor of their house, where they had taken refuge.

"The world of women and men was taken refuge in a school on high ground. forties, who was taking shelter in the gym with her brother and parents.

"We do not know how long we're allowed to stay here. "

Most of the deaths in hard-hit Hiroshima were from landslides in areas where they were built, beginning in the 1970s, Said Takashi Tsuchida, a civil engineering professor at Hiroshima University.

"People have been living for 40 to 50 years in an area that had latent risk, but did not go unchecked," he said.

"Intense goal

A new evacuation order went out on Tuesday in the aftermath of Hiroshima after, "he said.

[AnotherlargestormTyphoonMariawasbearingdownontheOkinawachainbutitwasweakenedfromasuper-typhoonandwasnotexpectedtohaveanyimpactonJapan'sfourmainislands

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