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Japan braces for more heavy rain as death toll rises to 66

TOKYO (AP) - Parts of Japan still searching for missing people and evacuating those stranded by deadly floods and mudslides were bracing for more pounding rains through the weekend.

The death toll has risen to 66 as of Friday morning, with 16 others still missing, the Fire and Disaster Management Agency said. Most of them are in prefectures on Kyushu, Japan's third-largest main island.

The damage has spread beyond Kyushu into central Japan's scenic mountain villages known for hot springs and hiking.

Search and rescue work continued in Kuma village, where nine people are missing and the effort has been delayed by deep floodwater and the risk of more mudslides. People isolated by the flooding are still being airlifted to safety.

In the famous hot springs town of Yufuin in Oita prefecture, an innkeeper was found dead, and rescuers were searching for three of her family members still missing.

Nearly 2,000 people were still stranded in 70 places, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said. Rescue workers and the authorities have been in touch with most of those areas, though the extent of damage has not been fully known.

The Meteorological Agency has issued evacuation advisories in Nagasaki and other areas on the Kyushu region due to continuing downpours. In all, more than 1.2 million people have been urged to evacuate, though it is not compulsory.

The agency predicted up to 300 millimeters (11 inches) of rain on the southern island through Saturday.

Suga urged residents in the affected regions to evacuate to designated facilities early and assured people that adequate virus safety measures are being used.

Police officers carry earth and sand by buckets as they search for the missing in Tsunagi town, Kumamoto prefecture, southern Japan Friday, July 10, 2020. Parts of Japan still searching for missing people and trying to repair damages from deadly floods and mudslides were bracing for more pounding rains through the weekend. (Kyodo News via AP) The Associated Press
Workers attempt to restore a collapsed road as it was hit by heavy rains in Takayama, Gifu prefecture, southern Japan Thursday, July 9, 2020.Flooding and mudslides have stranded hundreds of people in scenic hot springs and hiking areas in central Japan in the disaster that already has killed dozens of people in a southern region.(Kyodo News via AP) The Associated Press
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