China Daily

Shanshan churning toward Japan

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TOKYO — A powerful typhoon was churning toward Japan on Wednesday, prompting the weather agency to warn of heavy rain and strong winds and forcing airlines to cancel scores of flights.

Typhoon “Shanshan”, a Chinese girl’s name, was expected to be less than 150 kilometers from Tokyo around midnight on Wednesday, sparking fears the busy morning commute in the capital could be disrupted the following day.

The typhoon is coming “very close to the Pacific coast” of eastern Japan, centering on Tokyo, and was expected to move toward northern provinces from late on Wednesday and early on Thursday, the meteorolog­ical agency said.

“There are also risks that it may make landfall,” it said, warning it could dump 400 millimeter­s of rain over the greater Tokyo region over the 24 hours by Thursday noon.

“Please be fully on alert against mudslides, flooding in low-lying areas, flooding of rivers, violent winds, high waves and high tides,” the agency said in a statement, urging residents to obey any evacuation instructio­ns.

In the Chiba region east of Tokyo, local officials issued their lowest-level evacuation warning for some residents and urged others to be on stand-by for evacuation orders.

The slow-moving storm is packing maximum gusts of 180 km/h and was estimated to be 250 km southeast of Tokyo at 4 pm on Wednesday.

With rain and winds expected to intensify later in the day, television networks urged Tokyo workers to go home early.

Airlines have canceled scores of domestic and internatio­nal flights to and from Tokyo’s Haneda airport and the main Narita Airport east of the capital.

The ANA group scrapped 36 domestic flights as well as internatio­nal flights from Narita to Shanghai and Hong Kong.

The typhoon is the latest weather front to batter Japan, which has been sweating through a record and deadly heat wave. This followed devastatin­g heavy rain in central and western parts of the country in July.

The record rains caused flooding and landslides that killed more than 200 people and devastated swathes of the country.

 ?? TORU HANAI / REUTERS ?? A woman uses an umbrellato struggle against a heavy rain and wind in Tokyo on Wednesday.
TORU HANAI / REUTERS A woman uses an umbrellato struggle against a heavy rain and wind in Tokyo on Wednesday.

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