TOKYO – Five households in the immediate vicinity of a massive, ever-widening sinkhole near Tokyo were urged to evacuate on Feb 2, with efforts to rescue a man stuck inside reportedly halted.
A 74-year-old truck driver was swallowed on Jan 28 by the cavity, which has since expanded to 40m across – almost the length of an Olympic swimming pool.
The growing hole could be the result of corroded sewerage pipes, according to the local authorities.
Requests were issued on Feb 2 for five households near the hole in the city of Yashio, Saitama region, to take shelter, a local government official told AFP.
This is on top of other residents within a 50m radius of the cavity who are also being encouraged to evacuate, he said.
On Feb 1, Japanese rescuers completed building a 30m slope to send heavy equipment and reach the truck driver.
But a good amount of sewage water was discovered underneath the slope, which, combined with rain, led to the rescue mission being suspended on Feb 2, public broadcaster NHK said.
With the walls of the hole – around 15m deep, according to NHK – eroding, rescue workers are unable to stay inside it for long.
The hole was initially around 5m in diameter, but combined with a larger cavity that opened during the rescue operation on the night of Jan 28.
Around 1.2 million people living nearby have so far been asked to cut back on showers and laundry to prevent leaking sewage from hindering the operation. AFP
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