San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Strong earthquake rattles Japan; officials see no threat of tsunami

- By Yuri Kageyama

TOKYO — A strong earthquake hit off the coast of northeaste­rn Japan late Saturday, shaking Fukushima, Miyagi and other areas, but there was no threat of a tsunami, officials said.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. said there were no irregulari­ties at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, which experience­d meltdowns following a massive quake and tsunami 10 years ago.

There were no immediate reports of irregulari­ties from other nuclear plants in the area, such as Onagawa or Fukushima Dai-ni, government spokespers­on Katsunobu Kato told reporters.

The Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency said the quake had a magnitude of 7.3, raising it from a preliminar­y magnitude of 7.1.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. said that some 860,000 homes were without power as a result of the quake, but electricit­y was gradually being restored, according to Kato.

Kato said there was no danger of a tsunami from the quake. He said that some trains in northeaste­rn Japan had stopped running, and that other damage was still being checked.

Video from public broadcaste­r NHK TV showed some pieces of a building wall had broken off and fallen to the ground, and pieces of glass were scattered at a store. Items fell off shelves because of the shaking, NHK said. NHK aerial footage showed a portion of a highway blocked by a landslide in Soma, a city in Fukushima prefecture.

The extent of damage from the landslide was not immediatel­y clear, Kato said.

He said there were several reports of minor injuries from the quake, such as a man getting hit by a falling object.

The Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency said the quake was centered about 34 miles beneath the ocean, changing it from the earlier estimate for 37 miles.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga headed into his office immediatel­y after reports of the quake, and a crisis center was set up there. He said there were no reports of major injuries.

“We will continue to respond, putting human lives first,” Suga told reporters early Sunday.

 ?? Jun Hirata / Associated Press ?? A structure falls in Koorimachi early Sunday after a major earthquake struck off northeaste­rn Japan.
Jun Hirata / Associated Press A structure falls in Koorimachi early Sunday after a major earthquake struck off northeaste­rn Japan.

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