Sunday, March 13, 2011

A Jalisco gelatin was''buildings''

Japheth Rabago is one of many Mexicans living in Japan. He fell in love and married a Japanese girl who "took him" five years ago the nation Japan, where he works as a waiter in a Mexican restaurant. At 23:46 Thursday night (Mexico time), ie 2:46 in Tokyo, was a five-degree earthquake Richter scale. Japheth was the capital of Japan and soon learn that in other parts of the country, the tremor was higher and left disaster and death, including a tsunami.

El Tapatio 31 years was eating at a restaurant with his wife and a friend at the time of the earthquake. The experience, she says, was confusing and terrifying: "The buildings were moving like gelatin back and forth" he says, "people started to scream and get under the tables." The strangest thing, he recalls, "was seeing hundreds of Japanese walking the streets, because the trains were out of service." It took three hours to reach Japheth home for this situation.

Things around the country, for now, "are somewhat confusing and people are scared, but more important is that my wife and I are good." Living in Tokyo is 23. He works at a cosmetics company producing and was in his work area when the earth began to wobble. Enomoto Masako, who speaks perfect Spanish and tells you who lived from Japan's capital amid efforts to restore normalcy, said he was working in his office when the walls began to sway.

"At first, the earthquake was smooth, but began to spread and become stronger. When we thought it was over, began again and we realized we had to leave the office, and outside, everything was moving very strong, something we had never felt. Everything was moving from left to right: power lines were moving much, cars near the office moved a lot too.

I was really scared. One of my coworkers, who is 70 years, told us he had never experienced an earthquake like this. " She remembers that people were surprised, "everyone is out of the buildings and we are watching TV where there's fire in downtown Tokyo, and that is something that surprises us.

This earthquake was great seeing (...) everything moved I got scared and began to mourn. It was very scary. " Masako says she is very close to their workplace, "and because of that I could quickly see how my family was. All are fine, though the house has some damage cracks. "At this time (tells where in Japan is around noon after the quake) all of my colleagues try to trace their families, but can not because the phone lines work, the connection of phones and phones are cut off, everyone is trying to locate their important people.

At this point we still do not transport cars only have the company that gave us to return to our homes. Now we are more relaxed but people take longer than four hours to walk home. " Communication technology plays a vital role to restore peace. "Facebook has been very useful in these moments and also see the messages of support from around the world.

I mean I'm sorry for the people who lost people they want, I've heard there are over a thousand dead and 400 missing after the tsunami and the earthquake. I am very sorry. " Interviewed from Guadalajara, insists on giving thanks "to all my friends and tell them that I'm fine. Also like to thank my boyfriend who is in Barcelona and decided to be with me but I had to lie to your boss and tell him he was sick, we've talked on Skype all the time.

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