Nearly 4,000 people took part Sunday in a mass evacuation drill to test responses to a possible eruption of Japan's highest peak Mount Fuji, weeks after a nearby volcano blew its top and killed at least 56.
The 3,776-meter (12,389-foot) Fuji last erupted in 1707 but geologists have included it as one of 47 volcanoes in the Pacific Rim country believed to be at risk of eruption in the coming century.
Some 3,900 residents in 26 cities, towns and villages in three prefectures around the volcano were taking part in the drill, said a disaster management official for the Shizuoka prefectural government.
Fuji is just 100 kilometers (63 miles) west of Tokyo.
In the city of Gotemba, about 800 people used their own cars to evacuate along designated routes because public transportation is scarce there, the official, Hayato Mochizuki, told Agence France Presse.
Elderly people in need of care were moved by bus. Firefighters, police and troops searched for people who could not evacuate in time, he said.
Eriko Yamatani, the state minister in charge of disaster management, and the governors of the three prefectures took part in a video conference to oversee the operation.
On September 27 Mount Ontake, some 120 kilometers from Fuji, erupted without warning -- killing 56 people and leaving at least seven others missing in Japan's deadliest eruption for almost 90 years.
Mochizuki said the Fuji exercise had been planned for three years.
"But because of the (Ontake) eruption, we are conducting the drill in a serious atmosphere."
The Fuji drill -- whose scale was unprecedented -- was based on the scenario that an eruption occurred at a height of about 2,000 meters at 11 am with ash and smoke soaring 20 kilometers (12.5 miles) and lava flowing from craters.
More than 20 concrete blocks each weighing about two tonnes were to be placed to serve as a dyke and prevent the lava from flowing into a city area, Kyodo news agency said.
In the three prefectures -- Shizuoka, Yamanashi and Kanagawa -- 470,000 people would be forced to evacuate due to volcanic ash in the event that Mount Fuji erupted on a scale similar to that envisaged in the exercise, according to an official estimate.
Large amounts of lava would require 689,000 people to seek refuge and cut off the nation's major arteries, such as a high-speed railway and an expressway, along the Pacific seaboard.
Sachiko Katsumata, a physically handicapped 65-year-old woman taking part in the drill, told Jiji Press, she wanted to ensure she could respond to any emergency.
"As I saw the Mount Ontake eruption, I felt it could happen to anyone," she said.
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