Tokyo:
An 80-year-old woman and her teenage grandson were rescued on Sunday in northeastern Japan when the youth was able to pull himself out of their flattened two-story house nine days after the devastating earthquake and tsunami.
Jin Abe, 16, was seen calling out for help from the roof of the collapsed home in the hard-hit city of Ishinomaki, according to the Miyagi Prefectural Police.
Like other homes in northeastern Japan, they had lost electricity and telephone service in the March 11 earthquake.
He led them inside to his 80-year-old grandmother, Sumi Abe.
Both were conscious but weak, and had survived on the food they had in their refrigerator, said an Ishinomaki police department spokesman.
The woman could not get out of the house because she has trouble walking, and the teenager, who was suffering from a low body temperature, had been unable until Sunday to pull himself from the wreckage, the spokesman said.
They were found by local police who realised they couldn't get the woman out of the collapsed house and had to call other rescuers, he said.
National broadcaster NHK showed video of the stunned but coherent woman being placed on a stretcher.
She was able to give her name and told rescuers she had been in the house since it collapsed in the quake. When asked if she was hurt, she said no.
The police said they were trying to learn if there had been other relatives living in the house and their whereabouts.
NHK showed them being taken by helicopter to a hospital.
The quake and ensuing tsunami that devastated Japan's northeastern coast killed more than 8,100 people, with 12-thousand still missing.
Another 452-thousand have been displaced and are living in shelters.
Jin Abe, 16, was seen calling out for help from the roof of the collapsed home in the hard-hit city of Ishinomaki, according to the Miyagi Prefectural Police.
Like other homes in northeastern Japan, they had lost electricity and telephone service in the March 11 earthquake.
He led them inside to his 80-year-old grandmother, Sumi Abe.
Both were conscious but weak, and had survived on the food they had in their refrigerator, said an Ishinomaki police department spokesman.
The woman could not get out of the house because she has trouble walking, and the teenager, who was suffering from a low body temperature, had been unable until Sunday to pull himself from the wreckage, the spokesman said.
They were found by local police who realised they couldn't get the woman out of the collapsed house and had to call other rescuers, he said.
National broadcaster NHK showed video of the stunned but coherent woman being placed on a stretcher.
She was able to give her name and told rescuers she had been in the house since it collapsed in the quake. When asked if she was hurt, she said no.
The police said they were trying to learn if there had been other relatives living in the house and their whereabouts.
NHK showed them being taken by helicopter to a hospital.
The quake and ensuing tsunami that devastated Japan's northeastern coast killed more than 8,100 people, with 12-thousand still missing.
Another 452-thousand have been displaced and are living in shelters.
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