Airport evacuated as Japan typhoon leaves trail of destruction
Ten people were killed and 2.4m households had lost power in the devastating storm
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Amajor airport that was cut off when a huge typhoon smashed through its sole access road was being evacuated yesterday, as Japan grappled with devastation caused by its most powerful storm in a quarter of a century.
Boats were ferrying stranded passengers from Kansai International Airport — one of the country’s busiest — after thousands of people were forced to spend the night in the partially flooded facility.
At least ten people were killed, and hundreds more injured by Typhoon Jebi as it raked through the major manufacturing area around Osaka — Japan’s second city — wrecking infrastructure and destroying homes.
Island cut off
Winds up to 216 kilometres per hour ripped off roofs, overturned trucks on bridges and swept a 2,500-tonne tanker into a bridge leading to the airport, the region’s main international gateway and a national transport hub.
The damage to the bridge left the artificial island cut off, stranding 3,000 travellers and additional staff overnight.
Runways were flooded as high waves washed into the facility on Tuesday, knocking out electricity and inundating buildings. By yesterday afternoon, several hundred people had been ferried to Kobe on a specially chartered boat, but more than two thousand were still awaiting rescue.
There was no indication yet when the airport, which runs over 400 flights a day, might reopen.
“We had a blackout so there was no air conditioning. It was hot,” a woman told public broadcaster NHK after being ferried to Kobe.
“I’d never expected this amount of damage from a typhoon.”
Government spokesman Yoshihide Suga said the death toll in the storm stood at 10, with 300 people injured.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, tweeting on his official account, said the government was working to get the airport back online.
“We will do our best to get the airport functioning again,” he said.
He said 2.4 million households had lost power in the storm, with service restored to only half by Wednesday morning.
“We continue to make utmost efforts to respond to disaster damage and restore infrastructure,” he added.
More than 1.2 million people had been advised to leave their homes as Jebi approached the Kansai area — Japan’s industrial heartland. Around 16,000 people spent the night in shelters, local media said.