The death toll from Japan’s New Year’s Day earthquake has climbed to 168 while the number of missing almost tripled to 323, local authorities confirmed Monday.
A heavy dumping of snow meanwhile complicated relief efforts a week after the 7.5-magnitude quake, with more than 2,000 people still cut off and many others lacking power or forced to take shelter in crowded emergency sites.
A new list published by Ishikawa prefecture in central Japan on Monday showed the number of missing people soaring from 31 to 281 in Wajima, one of the worst-hit places where the quake flatted dozens of houses and a major fire devastated a large area.
As of Sunday, almost a week later, more than 2,000 people were still cut off by the damage the quake and an estimated 1,000 landslides did to roads on the worst-hit Noto Peninsula.
In the last two days, the region has also been blanketed in snow, with some areas receiving more than 10 centimeters (4 inches) overnight, making the operation harder still.
Against the odds, a woman in her 90s survived five days under the wreckage of a collapsed house in the city of Suzu before being saved on Saturday.
"Hang in there!" rescuers were heard calling to the woman, in police footage from the rainy scene published by local media.
"You're gonna be OK!" they shouted. "Stay positive!"
Not all were so lucky, with Naoyuki Teramoto, 52, inconsolable on Monday after three of his four children's bodies were discovered in the town of Anamizu.
"We were talking of plans to go to Izu," a famous hot spring resort after his daughter passed her high school entrance exam, he told broadcaster NTV.
Days of rain increased the risk of further landslides, while the fresh heavy snow could cause more buildings to collapse under its weight, the regional government warned.
Around 18,000 households in the Ishikawa region remained without electricity on Monday, while more than 66,100 households were without water Sunday.
For the 28,800 people packed into government shelters, many were also without sufficient water, electricity and heating, according to media reports.
"Disaster-related deaths must be prevented at all costs. I want to improve the poor environment in shelters," Ishikawa Gov. Hiroshi Hase told broadcaster NHK.
"The first priority has been to rescue people under the rubble, and to reach isolated communities," Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told NHK on Sunday.
The government has "deployed various police and fire department helicopters" as well as small groups of troops on foot to reach the isolated communities, he said.
Japan experiences hundreds of earthquakes every year, though most cause no damage because of strict building codes in place for more than four decades.
But many structures are older, especially in rapidly aging communities in rural areas like Noto.
The country is haunted by the monster quake of 2011 that triggered a tsunami, left around 18,500 people dead or missing and caused a nuclear catastrophe at the Fukushima plant.