New Straits Times

Typhoon disrupts air, rail services in Japan

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TOKYO: A powerful storm slammed into Japan yesterday, bringing heavy rain as it churned across western areas already hard hit by floods and landslides earlier this month.

Typhoon Jongdari, with winds of up to 180kph, made landfall at Ise in Mie prefecture at around 1am, according to the meteorolog­ical agency.

More than 170 domestic flights were cancelled and train services disrupted.

At least 10 people were injured in falls or by cuts from broken glass and metal shards, local police said.

Public broadcaste­r NHK put the number of injured at 19 across six prefecture­s.

The typhoon weakened after making landfall and was downgraded to a tropical storm but many provinces stayed on alert.

“We have been on emergency alert the whole time since the rain disaster” in early July, said Koji Kunitomi, a crisis management official in the western prefecture of Okayama.

“Fortunatel­y, so far, we haven’t seen new flooding,” he said.

The storm, after unleashing torrential rain over eastern Japan, was moving west yesterday afternoon.

Authoritie­s in western Japan urged tens of thousands of residents to evacuate before the rain intensifie­s.

TV footage showed high waves smashing onto rocks and seawalls southwest of here and trees buffeted by strong winds and heavy rain.

Waves shattered the window of an ocean-view restaurant at a hotel in the resort town of Atami southwest of here on Saturday.

“We didn’t expect this could happen... Waves gushed into the restaurant as the window broke but we are grateful that customers followed evacuation instructio­ns,” an official at the hotel said.

“Fortunatel­y no one was seriously hurt,” she said, adding that five people suffered cuts from broken glass as they fled.

The storm was moving across the western region of Chugoku, where record rainfall early this month unleashed flooding and landslides which killed around 220 people.

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