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Japan deploys 1,400 firefighters to battle raging wildfires in the north

Evacuation orders are in place for a third of Otsuchi's population, with the town lost nearly a tenth of its population in the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Kentaro Okasaka (Reuters)
Otsuchi, Japan
Sun, April 26, 2026 Published on Apr. 26, 2026 Published on 2026-04-26T13:16:33+07:00

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A firefighter works as wildfires continue in Otsuchi, Iwate Prefecture, Japan, on April 26, 2026. A firefighter works as wildfires continue in Otsuchi, Iwate Prefecture, Japan, on April 26, 2026. (Reuters/Kim Kyung-Hoon)

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apan has deployed 1,400 firefighters and 100 Self-Defense Force personnel to battle mountain blazes in the northern part of the country, with the fires, now burning on Sunday for a fifth straight day, continuing to threaten a picturesque coastal town.

The area consumed by the fires reached 1,373 hectares as of early Sunday morning, up 7 percent from a day earlier.

The fires threaten residential districts of Otsuchi on the Pacific Coast, a town that lost nearly a tenth of its population in one of Japan's worst disasters, the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Evacuation orders are in place for 1,541 households or 3,233 residents, roughly a third of Otsuchi's population.

"Although the Self-Defence Forces are fighting the fires from the sky [with helicopters], the dry weather and winds are helping the fires expand," Otsuchi Mayor Kozo Hirano told a press conference.

One Otsuchi resident said he worried about the damage the wildfire could inflict.

"A fire burns everything down. With a tsunami, you might have something left after the destruction," Yoshinori Komatsu, 74, said as he watched Self-Defence Force helicopters dump water over fires in the distance.

The only casualty to date has been one minor injury suffered when a person fell at an evacuation centre, Japan's Fire and Disaster Management Agency said on its website.

No rain is expected in the region on Sunday or Monday, but a brief shower is forecast on Tuesday, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.

The cause of the fires is unclear and under investigation.

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