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Death Toll In Japan Floods Reaches More Than 155, With Dozens Still Missing

A damaged car is seen stuck in the mud in a flood-hit area in Mabi, in Japan's Okayama prefecture, on Tuesday.
Martin Bureau
/
AFP/Getty Images
A damaged car is seen stuck in the mud in a flood-hit area in Mabi, in Japan's Okayama prefecture, on Tuesday.

Updated at 9:46 a.m. ET

At least 157 people are dead in western Japan and dozens are still missing after record rainfall that sparked flash floods and mudslides over the weekend, officials said, according to broadcaster NHK.

Search efforts were continuing for at least 57 others are still missing, most in hardest-hit Hiroshima prefecture, where dozens of people have died. The Japan Times reports rescuers on Tuesday were looking for people stranded in homes and in flooded areas that had not yet drained.

The newspaper says that the number of dead is the highest for a rain-related event in the country since 1982.

Authorities on Tuesday were also struggling to restore utilities to the flood-stricken areas.

At an emergency meeting Tuesday in Tokyo, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the federal government would streamline the process for emergency aid.

"We will assess the needs of victims and push for quick reconstruction," Abe vowed.

According to Reuters, electricity has been restored to all but 3,500 customers, but more than 200,000 remain without water.

"There have been requests for setting up air-conditioners due to rising temperatures above 30 degrees [86 degrees F] today, and at the same time we need to restore lifelines," Finance Minister Taro Aso told reporters after a Cabinet meeting, according to the news agency.

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Scott Neuman is a reporter and editor, working mainly on breaking news for NPR's digital and radio platforms.