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Japan to build hospital ships to boost disaster response in coastal areas: ‘a huge help’

  • The decision stems from January’s Noto Peninsula earthquake, which destroyed communities and limited rescue teams’ access into affected areas

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A port is wrecked in Anamizu, Ishikawa prefecture, on January 5, following a strong earthquake that jolted the Noto Peninsula and surrounding areas in central Japan on January 1. Photo: Kyodo

Japan is planning to construct hospital ships that will be able to respond quickly to natural disasters in coastal areas, with one medical expert who volunteered in the aftermath of the January 1 earthquake that struck the Noto Peninsula saying such vessels would have been a “huge help”.

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Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Tuesday instructed ministers to draw up a draft plan for ships designed to operate as floating hospitals by the end of the year.

The decision to develop hospital ships is a direct result of the magnitude 7.6 New Year’s Day earthquake, which triggered a series of tsunamis that destroyed a number of communities on the peninsula, including the towns of Suzu, Wajima and Noto.

Authorities have confirmed 281 fatalities and three people are still listed as missing. A further 1,300 people sustained injuries across six prefectures in the most powerful earthquake since the March 2011 tremor off northeast Japan.

“In our country, surrounded by the sea, there are situations in which approaching disaster areas from the sea and providing medical care are effective,” national broadcasters quoted Kishida as saying.

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A government task force is considering utilising car ferries for emergency relief efforts until specialist ships can be commissioned.

Debris from the January 1 Noto Peninsula earthquake piled up on a temporary waste disposal site in the Ishikawa prefecture city of Suzu, central Japan, six months after the disaster. Photo: Kyodo
Debris from the January 1 Noto Peninsula earthquake piled up on a temporary waste disposal site in the Ishikawa prefecture city of Suzu, central Japan, six months after the disaster. Photo: Kyodo
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