The Borneo Post

Two minor earthquake­s ‘wrongly trigger’ Japan’s alert system

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TOKYO: Mil lions of people in Tokyo received a loud alert yesterday that a “st rong” earthquake was about to hit — but it proved to be a false alarm apparently triggered by geological chance.

Text messages and whooping alarms were sent to the phones of millions in and around the Japanese capital, warning: “A quake has occurred off Ibaraki. Prepare for strong jolts.”

But of f icials suspect the early a ler t , i s sued by the Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency, was triggered by two minor e a r thqua ke s h i t t ing the archipelag­o at nearly exactly the same time.

A 4.4-magnitude quake struck off Ibaraki, northeast of Tokyo, in the Pacific at 11.02am ( 0202 GMT).

And nearly simultaneo­usly, a 3.9-magnitude tremor hit Toyama prefecture, some 350 kilometres west of the one off Ibaraki.

Even Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was caught off- guard by the false alarm — with TV footage showing him checking his f lip phone as alarms echoed in the prime minister’s office ahead of a cabinet meeting.

An a lert a lso f lashed on public broadcaste­r NHK as its announcer warned viewers: “Protect yoursel f. Stay away from unstable furniture.”

The warning forced train and subway operators in the capital to suspend services temporaril­y, whi le elevators — including those of Tokyo Tower — stopped, local media reported.

But any jolts were moderate with no injuries or damage reported.

“We suspect that the system overestima­ted it by calculatin­g the two separate quakes as one big quake,” an official said, adding that the agency was further investigat­ing the cause.

Japan launched the world’s first earthquake early warning system in 2007, giving residents vital extra seconds before a major quake hits.

The count r y si t s at the junction of four tectonic plates and experience­s a number of relatively violent quakes every year.

A 9.0-magnitude earthquake in March 2011 triggered a massive and deadly tsunami, which smashed into the Fukushima nuclear power stat ion and sparked the world’s worst atomic accident since Chernobyl in 1986.

In the cataclysmi­c earthquake, undergroun­d sensors detected the first tectonic shift and sent out telephone text messages to tens of millions of people within seconds.

But the agency has a l so wrongly issued the early warning system in the past, sparking unnecessar­y confusion and complaints. — AFP

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