The Free Press Journal

Japan hit by strongest storm in 25 yrs

Six killed; over 800 domestic and internatio­nal flights cancelled, tourist places closed

-

The strongest typhoon to hit Japan in 25 years battered the west of the country Tuesday with violent winds and heavy rain, killing six and injuring scores more.

Powerful gusts ripped sheeting from rooftops, overturned trucks on bridges and swept a tanker anchored in Osaka Bay into a bridge to Kansai Internatio­nal Airport.

The damage to the bridge left the airport cut off from the mainland and stranded around 3,000 people there, an official told AFP.

The airport was now conducting safety tests on the undamaged section of the bridge, the official said, but it remained unclear when the passengers could leave.

High waves whipped up by the storm also flooded parts of the airport, where all flights were cancelled, and the severe weather caused power outages and travel chaos across much of the country.

Typhoon Jebi made landfall around noon, slamming into the west of the country with winds of up to 216 kilometres (135 miles) per hour.

The fast-moving storm quickly crossed the mainland, and by nightfall was heading out to sea from Ishikawa in central Japan.

Public broadcaste­r NHK reported at least six deaths in the storm, including a 71year-old man killed in western Shiga prefecture after being trapped under a warehouse that collapsed in strong wind.

NHK said 164 people had suffered mostly minor injuries.

In Osaka television footage showed the large tanker smashing into the bridge connecting the city of Izumisano with Kansai airport, with its superstruc­ture battering away part of the bridge.

Local TV also showed footage of a 100-metre (328feet) tall ferris wheel in Osaka spinning furiously in the strong wind despite being switched off.

"I've never seen such a thing," a 19-year-old boy at the scene told NHK.

Elsewhere, the winds whipped away part of the ceiling from Kyoto station and peeled off multi-storey scaffoldin­g on a building in Osaka.

The storm left more than one million households without power and evacuation advisories were issued at one point for nearly 1.2 million people, with another 16,000 under stronger – though still not mandatory – evacuation orders.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had urged people to evacuate early and ordered his government to take all necessary measures to protect residents, after the weather agency warned of landslides, flooding and violent winds, as well as high tides, lightning and tornadoes.

 ??  ?? Left: A truck sitting at an angle after being blown over by winds caused by Typhoon Jebi on Seto Ohashi bridge in Sakade, Kagawa prefecture on Japan's Shikoku island. Right: Damaged vehicles blown by Jebi.
Left: A truck sitting at an angle after being blown over by winds caused by Typhoon Jebi on Seto Ohashi bridge in Sakade, Kagawa prefecture on Japan's Shikoku island. Right: Damaged vehicles blown by Jebi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India