y***o 发帖数: 503 | 1 KAMAISHI, Japan (AFP) – Isolated reports of looting by desperate tsunami
survivors have emerged in Japan, whose people have been widely applauded for
their discipline in the face of appalling adversity.
Other countries have noted with admiration, and some envy, the almost total
absence of social disorder following the massive March 11 earthquake and
ensuing tsunami that has left nearly 20,000 people dead or missing.
In stark contrast to the chaos and violence that followed last year's quake
in Haiti or Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in 2005, the response to Japan'
s worst natural disaster since 1923 has been a showcase for the restraint
and resilience of one of the world's most stable societies.
Despite chronic food and water shortages in the worst-affected areas, even
abandoned vending machines went untouched, their edible contents still
sitting behind their transparent fronts.
But now, more than a week after the tsunami hit, police say some incidents
of looting and theft are being reported from battered and abandoned homes
and stores.
The phenomenon is rare in Japan, a country where police crack down hard on
petty crime and residents are rewarded with a finder's fee for returning
lost or stolen items. Tales of misplaced wallets being returned are
legendary.
"Since we have been so busy with the search and rescue operations and then
the clean-up, it's hard for us to be aware of everyone who is looting," said
Hironori Kodashima, vice-chief of police in the small, badly hit fishing
port of Kamaishi in northeastern Iwate prefecture.
"We have just begun receiving reports about this and making arrests. But we
are concerned about it and want it stopped," he said, citing the case of a
man arrested as he was trying to prise open an ATM machine.
"Generally speaking, people are looting due to lack of food and money.
Thieves break in and loot homes because they have been abandoned and nobody
is living there any more," he said.
Others were less generous in their assessment, insisting that an increasing
number of people were coming to the devastated northeast coast with a view
to profiting from the chaos and destruction.
Masayuki Sasaki, 42, lost his mother to the tsunami that almost obliterated
the town of Rikuzentakata, some 50 kilometres (30 miles) south of Kamaishi.
He and his widower father returned to the flattened remains of their home to
try and salvage anything useful or personal.
But, Sasaki complained, survivors and rescuers were not the only ones
hunting around.
"I can cope with living in the refugee centre and all that, but what I
really can't stand is the thieves who come here," he said.
"They pretend to be helping, but they're looking for money, or maybe for
bank books. I have lost everything and they come here looking for money. It'
s disgusting."
The vast majority of Japanese have remained calm and stoical, putting up
with difficult conditions at evacuation shelters and waiting patiently in
line for hours at gas stations and outside supermarkets running low on
supplies.
And what theft has taken place has generally been low-level, including cases
of people siphoning fuel out of abandoned vehicles.
Nevertheless, some people have still been appalled that any crimes have been
committed at all at a time when people are trying to pull together -- and
in a usually safe country where such behaviour is not common.
"Is it safe now? No, in fact you can?t say it's safe," said Ayako Ito, 84,
whose mountainside home overlooking Kamaishi was high enough to be spared
the ravages of the tsunami.
"People who see the thieves scream 'Stop it, stop it!' It's best to not go
far from your house because our belongings are inside," said Ito, who had
only eaten one rice ball all day and said she was suffering from the cold at
night with no power or electricity.
Masuya Misato, 33, a volunteer worker in Kamaishi, said he had witnessed
several cases of smash-and-grab raids.
"They steal items from stores and cash from the destroyed houses. They also
steal beer and cigarettes," Misato said.
"There are cars everywhere that were swept away by the tsunami, and since
they have been abandoned, they steal gas," he added.
"It's shocking and I hope it stops soon." | y***o 发帖数: 503 | |
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