Selepas Tsunami Melanda kini Salji Tebal Pula Melanda Mangsa Tsunami…
 

 
Heavy snow falls on a factory area devastated by an earthquake and tsunami in Sendai, northern Japan March 16, 2011.
 
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Snow falls over the debris in Sendai, northern Japan Wednesday, March 16, 2011 after Friday’s massive earthquake and tsunami.
 

 
Rescue workers walk past a destroyed car during heavy snowfall at a  factory area devastated by an earthquake and tsunami in Sendai, northern  Japan March 16, 2011.
 

 
A man walks past a collapsed house during heavy snowfall at a factory  area devastated by an earthquake and tsunami in Sendai, northern Japan  March 16, 2011.
 

 
A man walks past a collapsed house during heavy snowfall at a factory  area devastated by an earthquake and tsunami in Sendai, northern Japan  March 16, 2011.
 

 
Rescue workers walk past a destroyed car during heavy snowfall at a  factory area devastated by an earthquake and tsunami in Sendai, northern  Japan March 16, 2011.
 

 
A rescue worker uses a two-way radio transceiver during heavy  snowfall  at a factory area devastated by an earthquake and tsunami in  Sendai, northern Japan March 16, 2011.
 

 
A resident rides a bicycle in a snowy weather in downtown Sendai,   northeastern Japan March 16, 2011. Residents living in earthquake and   tsunami damaged Sendai struggled to get necessaries including food, gas   and medicine after most shops closed.
 

 

 
Residents carry supplies bought at a supermarket in downtown Sendai,   northeastern Japan, March 16, 2011, as it snows. Residents living in   the earthquake and tsunami-damaged Sendai are struggling to purchase   even the most basic necessities such as food, petrol and medicine as   most of the shops are closed.
 

 
Rescue workers walk past a damaged car during heavy snowfall at a  factory area devastated by an earthquake and tsunami in Sendai, northern  Japan March 16, 2011.
 

 

 
Braving falling snpw, resident return their evacuation shelter Wednesday March 16, 2011 in Natori, Miyagi prefecture, Japan.
 

 
Braving falling snow, residents return a place where their home used  to  be to search for household goods Wednesday March 16, 2011 in Sendai,  Miyagi prefecture, Japan.
 

 
Braving falling snow, residents return to a place where their home  used  to be to search for household goods Wednesday March 16, 2011 in  Sendai, Miyagi prefecture, Japan.
 

 
People make their way in a snow in Natori, Miyagi, northern Japan   Wednesday, March 16, 2011 after Friday’s massive earthquake and tsunami.
 

 
Snow falls over an devastated area in Onagawa, northern Japan  Wednesday,  March 16, 2011 after Friday’s massive earthquake and  tsunami.
 

 
Firefighters operate heavy machinery in the snow while seeking  survivors  beneath an overpass in Otsuchi, northern Japan, Wednesday,  March 16,  2011, after Friday’s earthquake and tsunami.
 

 
Firefighters continue search operation in snow in Minamisanriku,   northern Japan Wednesday, March 16, 2011 after Friday’s massive   earthquake and tsunami.
 

 

 
A French fireman steps over debris during a search operation in  Sendai on March 16, 2011 days after a massive earthquake and tsunami   devastated the coast of eastern Japan. Millions have been left without   water, electricity, fuel or enough food and hundreds of thousands more   are homeless, stoically coping with freezing cold and wet conditions in   the northeast after the twin disasters.
 

 
Sufferers read newspapers in Otsuchi, northern Japan Wednesday, March 16, 2011 after Friday’s massive earthquake and tsunami.
 

 ‘We Need World’s Help’: Japan Evacuee Town Mayor
 The mayor of a town near Japan’s quake-damaged and stricken Fukushima   nuclear plant said Wednesday that it desperately needs help for   thousands of evacuees sheltered there.
 “We have received many  people who were evacuated from the area near  the plant,” Masao Hara,  mayor of Koriyama city, about 50 kilometres (30  miles) west of the  nuclear plant, told AFP by mobile telephone.
 “Right now some  9,000 people are at shelters in Koriyama,” he told  AFP, including 200 at  a baseball stadium which was recently renovated  to receive disaster  evacuees.
 “What we urgently need now is  fuel, heavy and light  oil, water and food. More than anything else, we  need fuel because we  can’t do anything without it. We can’t stay warm  or work the water  pumps.
 “We also need to move our vehicles to collect garbage. I really would like to appeal to the world: We need help.”
 More  than 200,000 people have been evacuated from a 20-kilometre  radius  around the power station, which has been rocked by a series of   explosions and seen local spikes of radiation at levels damaging to   human health.
 “People are worried but acting very calmly,” said  Hara. “They’re not  in a panic at all. They get more concerned after they  watch television  and see how anxious the rest of the country is.”
 The  Fukushima plant was damaged in Friday’s massive quake and  tsunami  calamity, which killed thousands and left large parts of  northern Japan  desperately short of water, food, fuel and other basic  necessities.AFP
 “Apa  yang kami sangat perlukan  sekarang adalah bahan bakar, berat dan ringan,  minyak, air dan makanan.  Lebih dari segalanya, kita amat memerlukan  bahan bakar  kerana kita  tidak boleh melakukan apa-apa tanpanya. paling penting Untuk kami   menghangatkan  dan untuk  kerja pam air.
 Kami amat memerlukan Dunia Supaya membantu kami…