Japan Authorities Declare Heatwave a Natural Disaster as Death Toll Reaches 80

Japan Authorities Declare Heatwave a Natural Disaster as Death Toll Reaches 80
A man wipes perspiration from his head in Tokyo on July 24, 2018, as Japan suffers from a heatwave. (MARTIN BUREAU/AFP/Getty Images))
Zachary Stieber
Updated:

Authorities in Japan have declared a heatwave there a natural disaster as at least 80 people have died due to the intense weather conditions.

Japan’s Fire and Disaster Management Agency declared the record-breaking weather a natural disaster in a statement, reported Channel News Asia.

The agency said 22,647 people were hospitalized in the previous week, while 80 people have died from the heat since the beginning of July. Among those who have died was a 6-year-old male student who lost consciousness on his way back from a field trip; and a 91-year-old woman who collapsed in a field.

Officials are working to combat the heat, with one effort supplying funds to all schools to ensure air conditioners are equipped by next summer. Right now, fewer than 50 percent of the country’s public schools have air conditioning.

Government officials are also considering extending the summer break for students.

“As a record heatwave continues to blanket the country, urgent measures are required to protect the lives of schoolchildren,” top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told reporters Tuesday.

Temperatures on Monday reached a high of 106 degrees Fahrenheit (41.1 degrees Celsius) in the city of Kumagaya, which set a new national heat record (the government began recording temperatures in 2008).

Meteorologists warned that temperatures will continue to rise above 95 degrees Fahrenheit (35 degrees Celsius) until early August.

“We are observing unprecedented levels of heat in some areas,” Japan Meteorological Agency spokesman Motoaki Takekawa said, adding that the heatwave was “a threat to life and we recognize it as a natural disaster,” BBC reported.
One Japanese resident, Nur Rosmawati, 27, who works in international business development, told the Straits Times that she blacked out while walking for five minutes from her house to a convenience store over the weekend.

“It was not sheltered but I had my umbrella with me. At the entrance of the convenience store, I started to feel faint and my ears started to ring,” she said, noting she quickly consumed an energy bar and a drink and felt better.

Layla Tan, 28, an international business adviser, said she felt heat exhaustion on Sunday.

“First I felt a migraine-like headache. I drank lots of water but by then it was too late,” she said. “The headache got worse, and I started feeling nauseous, followed by muscle aches.”

Japanese officials have been advising people to use air conditioning, stop to rest often when outside, and drink plenty of water and other fluids.

Temperatures in nearby South Korea have also set new records. The temperature reached 105 degrees Fahrenheit (40.3 degrees Celsius) in Yeongcheon in North Gyeongsang Province on Tuesday, reported The Korea Times.

That set a new record for the Korean Peninsula, according to the Korea Meteorological Administration, which has been collecting weather data since 1907.

From NTD.tv
Zachary Stieber
Zachary Stieber
Senior Reporter
Zachary Stieber is a senior reporter for The Epoch Times based in Maryland. He covers U.S. and world news. Contact Zachary at [email protected]
twitter
truth