Rescuers at the peak of Mount Ontake, now an eerie moonscape under a thick layer of grey ash, on Monday found what may be five new victims of the Saturday eruption.
The eruption of the 3,067-metre (10,062-feet) volcano, 200 km (125 miles) west of Tokyo, took place as the popular hiking site was packed with climbers, including children, admiring autumn foliage.
“It’s my son, my second son. We’ve had absolutely no contact at all,” a grey-haired man told Japanese television, adding that his 26-year-old son had gone to the mountain with his girlfriend. “We’re utterly exhausted.”
More than 500 rescuers had been combing the summit, ploughing through knee-deep ash and passing mountain lodges with holes punched in their roofs by rocks shot out of the volcano.
Helicopters lifted laden stretchers one by one from the summit on Monday before rescue efforts were abandoned. As on Sunday the smell of sulphur strengthened at the peak, fanning fears of toxic fumes and forcing rescuers off the mountain.
Japan is one of the world’s most seismically active nations. In 1991, 43 people died in a pyroclastic flow, a superheated current of gas and rock, at Mount Unzen in the southwest.
“I felt a hot wind blast against my back and crouched down to the ground,” a man told NTV. “I was sure I was going to die.” It was natural that Japan’s Meteorological Agency, which monitors volcanic activity, might reconsider its surveillance system, said Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga.
“However, I believe that, given current levels of knowledge, they made the only judgment they could,” he told a news conference. Suga also said the eruption would have no impact on the restart of the Sendai nuclear plant in southwestern Japan, an area of active volcanic sites. The plant was just cleared to restart in early September.
“They often occur quite suddenly and there is absolutely no guarantee that the earthquakes earlier this month were connected,” he told a news conference on Sunday. “There is no guarantee of total safety when you’re dealing with nature.”
-INDIA TODAY