The Star Malaysia

Typhoon leaves five dead after lashing Japan on election day

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TOKYO: A powerful typhoon left five dead, one missing and scores injured in Japan, moving northward off the Pacific coast after millions struggled to the polls for a national election.

Authoritie­s advised thousands living in coastal areas or near rivers to evacuate to shelters before Typhoon Lan, described as “very large and very strong”, hit Tokyo and surroundin­g regions early yesterday morning.

The typhoon had left the Japanese archipelag­o by about 9am after making landfall in Shizuoka southwest of Tokyo six hours before, the weather agency said.

The storm, which had already dumped torrential rain over much of the country during the weekend, packed gusts up to 162kph, the meteorolog­ical agency said.

Train operators suspended some commuter trains in Tokyo suburbs early yesterday and cancelled some “Shinkansen” bullet trains in northern Japan after a blackout left passengers stranded overnight in the country’s central region.

Nearly 300 flights scheduled for yesterday have already been cancelled, public broadcaste­r NHK said, after strong winds forced 500 flights to be grounded on Sunday.

Some ferry services in western Japan were also cancelled as the weather agency warned of high waves, landslides and floods across the archipelag­o.

The typhoon claimed its first victims on Sunday as a male passer-by died when scaffoldin­g collapsed on him at a constructi­on site in Fukuoka in western Japan.

Also in western Japan, a 70-yearold man was found dead in Yamaguchi after he dived into the sea to grab a rope from another vessel as he attempted to escape from his troubled boat, a coastguard said.

In Osaka prefecture, a man in his 80s died after being crushed under a blown-off shutter while a woman in her 60s was found dead in a submerged car, local officials said.

A 29-year-old man was also found in a submerged car in the central prefecture of Mie.

Separately, a 61-year-old man has been missing in eastern Japan’s Ibaraki prefecture after he went fishing on Sunday.

More than 130 people were injured across the nation, NHK said, while the central government has so far confirmed 97 injuries.

Television footage showed rescuers tugging a rubber boat carrying an elderly woman in a residentia­l area in Chiba southeast of Tokyo as a flooded river engulfed the area.

On Sunday, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe ordered his minister in charge of disasters to be ready to mobilise rescue and evacuation forces, including troops.

“In order to protect people’s lives, the Abe Cabinet will unite and do its best to provide an emergency response to a disaster,” he said.

The foul weather did affect the election, with ferries to a remote island in the west cancelled due to high waves, forcing officials to suspend the counting of votes there.

On Saturday, voters on remote southern islands in the path of the storm cast their ballots early, heeding a call from Abe. — AFP

 ??  ?? Nature’s wrath: A road collapse following torrential rain caused by Typhoon Lan in Kishiwada, Japan. — Reuters
Nature’s wrath: A road collapse following torrential rain caused by Typhoon Lan in Kishiwada, Japan. — Reuters

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