Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Typhoon damage closes airport in Japan

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TOKYO — One of Japan’s busiest airports remained closed indefinite­ly, a day after the strongest typhoon to hit Japan in 25 years flooded a runway, toppled huge cranes, flipped cars onto their sides, damaged historic shrines and caused at least 11 deaths as it swept across part of Japan’s main island.

Typhoon Jebi moved ashore with sustained winds of 100 mph, cutting a path of destructio­n in and around Osaka and nearby cities that bore the brunt of the storm.

A large commercial ship was washed onto a breakwater, and shipping containers were left floating in the sea. In Kyoto, the former imperial capital and a popular tourist destinatio­n, wooden shrine buildings and tall orange-red entrance gates were knocked down.

More than 400,000 households in western and central Japan remained without power Wednesday. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said at least 11 people had been confirmed dead, and 470 people were injured.

Some 3,000 airline passengers, who had to spend the night at the offshore Kansai airport, were able to leave on boats and buses under sunny skies Wednesday. They were stranded after a tanker unmoored by the storm’s pounding waves and wind slammed into a bridge that is the airport’s only link to the mainland.

Officials could not say when the airport would reopen.

 ?? AP ?? A deer stands Wednesday near a tree toppled by Typhoon Jebi at the Kasugatais­ha shrine in Nara, Japan.
AP A deer stands Wednesday near a tree toppled by Typhoon Jebi at the Kasugatais­ha shrine in Nara, Japan.

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