Hagibis lashes Japan
TOKYO – One man was killed and more than three million people were advised to evacuate as a powerful typhoon bore down on the Japanese capital yesterday, bringing with it the heaviest rain and winds in 60 years.
Typhoon Hagibis, which means “speed” in Filipino, was due to make landfall on Japan’s main island of Honshu late yesterday, threatening to flood low-lying Tokyo as it coincides with high tide.
An earthquake also shook the area drenched by the rainfall shortly before the typhoon’s landfall. The United States Geological Survey said the magnitude 5.3 quake was centered in the ocean off the coast of Chiba, near Tokyo, and was fairly deep, at 59.5 kilometers.
The typhoon, which the government warned could be the strongest to hit Tokyo since 1958, has already brought recordbreaking rainfall in Kanagawa
prefecture south of Tokyo with a whopping 700 millimeters of rain over 24 hours.
The Japan Meteorological Agency issued the highest level of warning for some areas in Tokyo, Kanagawa and five other surrounding prefectures, warning of amounts of rain that occur only once in decades.
“We are seeing unprecedented rain,” an agency official told a news conference carried by public broadcaster NHK. “Damage from floods and landslides is likely taking place already.”
Many people in and around Tokyo were already taking shelter in temporary evacuation facilities.
Yuka Ikemura, a 24-yearold nursery school teacher, was in one such facility at a community center in Edogawa in eastern Tokyo with her three-year-old son, eightmonth-old daughter and their pet rabbit.
Ikemura said she decided to move before it was too late.
“I’ve got small children to take care of and we live on the first floor of an old apartment,” she said.
“We brought with us the bare necessities. I’m scared to think about when we will have run out diapers and milk,” she told Reuters.
Vulnerable
Tokyo’s Haneda airport and Narita airport in Chiba both stopped flights from landing and connecting trains were suspended, forcing the cancelation of more than a thousand flights, according to Japanese media.
Kanagawa prefecture officials said they would release water from the Shiroyama dam, southwest of Tokyo, and alerted residents in areas along nearby rivers.
Heavy winds have already caused some damage, particularly in Chiba east of Tokyo, where one of the strongest typhoons to hit Japan in recent years destroyed or damaged 30,000 houses a month ago.
A man in his 40s was killed in an overturned car in the prefecture early yesterday, while five persons were injured as winds blew roofs off several houses, according to NHK.
A number of municipal governments issued evacuation advisories to areas particularly at risk of floods and landslides, including some in the most populous Tokyo region.
Experts warned that Tokyo, while long conditioned to prepare for earthquakes, was vulnerable to flooding.
Tokyo, where 1.5 million people live below sea level, is prone to damage from storm surges, Japan Riverfront Research Center director Nobuyuki Tsuchiya told Reuters.
“We are heading towards high tide. If the typhoon hits Tokyo when the tide is high, that could cause storm surges and that would be the scariest scenario,” Tsuchiya said.
“People in Tokyo have been in a false sense of security,” he added.
More than 16,000 households have lost power, including 7,200 in Chiba, which was
hit hard by typhoon Faxai a month ago, according to the industry ministry.
The Defense Ministry set up a new Twitter account to disseminate information on disaster relief efforts.
Stores, factories and subway systems have been shut down as a precaution, while Japanese Formula One Grand Prix organizers cancelled all practice and qualifying sessions scheduled yesterday.
Two matches of the Rugby World Cup due to be played yesterday were also cancelled.
Typhoon Ida, known as the “Kanogawa Typhoon” in Japanese, killed more than 1,000 people in 1958.