17.1 C
Delhi
Thursday, January 15, 2026

232 confirmed dead after Japan’s Noto quake: local gov’t

Date:

Share post:

Tokyo: The death toll from the powerful earthquake which struck central Japanese prefecture of Ishikawa rose to 232 on Wednesday, according to local authorities.

According to the prefectural government, the updated figure came as of 9 a.m. local time, with an additional 10 casualties reported by the city of Wajima, one of the most-hit regions by the Noto Peninsula Earthquake.

Local authorities said these fatalities were discovered in the vicinity of the Wajima Morning Market, a popular tourist spot that suffered extensive damage in the earthquake-triggered fires immediately following the seismic event.

Since last week, the Wajima Morning Market has been the focus of large-scale search and rescue operations.

The number of individuals unaccounted for has decreased by one, leaving Wajima city with 17 missing persons and Suzu city with four, totaling 21 people.

According to local media reports, the damage to residences has reached a staggering 22,374 confirmed cases, and there is a high likelihood that the number of affected buildings will significantly increase as further assessments are conducted.

In cities of Wajima and Suzu, the extent of the damage is still described as “numerous,” with the actual situation remaining unclear, reported national news agency Kyodo.

Related articles

Pride of the Nation and the Daughter of Jammu & Kashmir Rouble Nagi Among Global Teacher Prize 2026 Top 10 Finalists

Jammu & Kashmir takes immense pride as Rouble Nagi, a true daughter of the soil, has been selected...

Zero Cut-Off, Zero Fairness: How NEET-PG 2025 Has Failed Merit

The decision of the National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS) to reduce the qualifying percentile to...

Corruption and the Black Stones in Our Rice

In Goan households, rice is not merely food; it is ritual. Before the pot meets the flame, our...

What Venezuela’s Unravelling Teaches India About the Future of Power

In the twenty-first century, power no longer resides only in armies, institutions, or territory. It increasingly resides in...