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Japan to build 100,000 homes for disaster survivors

Japan's government is proposing a special $47-billion budget to help finance reconstruction efforts and plans to build 100,000 temporary homes for quake and tsunami survivors.
Residents speak to police officers as they leave the evacuation zone around the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant on Thursday. (Kyodo/Reuters)

Japan's government is proposing a special $47-billion (4 trillion yen) budget to help finance reconstruction efforts and plans to build 100,000 temporary homes for survivors of last month's devastating earthquake and tsunami.

The twin disasters destroyed roads, ports, farms and homes and crippled a nuclear power plant that forced tens of thousands of more people to evacuate their houses for at least several months. The government said the damage could cost $294 billion, making it the world's most expensive natural disaster.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan said he was moved by his conversations with victims during a recent tour of shelters.

"I felt with renewed determination that we must do our best to get them back as soon as possible," he told reporters.

The government approved an extra $47 billion to help finance the rebuilding, in what is expected to be only the first installment of reconstruction funding. About $14 billionwill go to fixing roads and ports and more than $8 billion will go to build temporary homes and clearing rubble.

"This is the first step toward rebuilding Japan after the major disasters," Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda said.

More than 27,000 people are dead or missing after the earthquake and tsunami hit northern Japan on March 11. About 135,000 survivors are living in 2,500 shelters set up in schools and community centers. Many others have moved into temporary housing or are staying with relatives.

As part of the government's recovery plan, it will build 30,000 temporary homes by the end of May and another 70,000 after that, Kan said.