San Francisco Chronicle

Heat wave bakes region, sets record high in Japan

- By Mari Yamaguchi and Hyung-Jin Kim Mari Yamaguchi and Hyung-Jin Kim are Associated Press writers.

TOKYO — Japan recorded its highest temperatur­e ever Monday as a deadly heat wave continued to grip a wide swath of the country and nearby South and North Korea.

The mercury hit 106 degrees in Kumagaya, a city in Saitama prefecture about 40 miles northwest of Tokyo, the Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency said.

Two lingering highpressu­re systems have trapped warm and humid air above the region, bringing record high temperatur­es for nearly two weeks. More than 40 people have died in Japan and about 10 in South Korea.

“It is so hot these days that I cannot figure out whether I am in (South Korea) or in Southeast Asia,” said Kim Sung-hee, a student in downtown Seoul, where the temperatur­e rose to 96.

Ten people have died in South Korea of heatstroke and other heat-related causes this summer, seven of them last week, the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday. About 1,040 people have fallen ill because of hot weather from May 20 to July 21, an increase of 61 percent over the same period last year, it said.

South Korea’s highesteve­r morning low was recorded in the city of Gangneung, where the temperatur­e was 88 at 6:45 a.m. The morning low in Seoul was 84.6, a record for the country’s capital, according to South Korea’s weather agency.

The mercury hit 103.8 in the southeaste­rn town of Hayang, the highest temperatur­e in the country so far this year.

In North Korea, residents fanned themselves on crowded trolleys or protected themselves from the sun with parasols as temperatur­es in Pyongyang, the capital, reached 93.2. Weather reports said higher temperatur­es were recorded on the country’s east coast.

Thousands of people in Japan have been rushed to hospitals with heatstroke symptoms during the heat wave. Kyodo News agency has tallied more than 40 deaths. Many of the victims have been elderly people who were not using air conditioni­ng. On Monday, nine people died from heatrelate­d causes across Japan, Kyodo said.

The temperatur­e reached 102 on Monday in central Tokyo, the highest temperatur­e this year. The worst of the heat wave is expected to be over this week.

Tourists in Tokyo’s historic Asakusa district struggled with the heat. Cosett Romero from Mexico said she and her family were getting headaches. “It’s difficult to us because we don’t have this heat in Mexico,” she said.

Authoritie­s warned people to stay inside and use air conditioni­ng.

“The weather recently in Tokyo and across Japan is like being in a sauna,” Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike said at a news conference.

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