Daily Dispatch

Tokyo simulates first military attack

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HUNDREDS of Tokyo residents scrambled for cover yesterday in the Japanese capital’s first evacuation drill for a military attack since World War 2, amid ongoing tensions over North Korea’s nuclear programme.

A loudspeake­r blared out a terrifying warning at the drill, held in a Tokyo amusement park: “We have informatio­n that a missile launch has occurred. Please evacuate calmly inside a building or undergroun­d.”

A park employee ran around, shouting “a missile was launched, a missile was launched” as some 250 local residents and office workers duly evacuated to reinforced concrete buildings and a nearby subway station.

A few minutes later, a second message was announced via loudspeake­r: “The missile passed. The missile likely flew over the Kanto [greater Tokyo] region towards the Pacific Ocean.”

People in earthquake-prone Japan are familiar with evacuation drills simulating natural disasters and fires and annual drills are seasonal rituals seen almost everywhere in the country – from schools and workplaces to care homes.

But a drill simulating a North Korean missile attack on Tokyo is still a novel idea, although similar drills were held in other parts of Japan last year.

“I think it’s better than nothing to have such a drill, but I am praying there is no missile attack from the North,” said Shota Matsushima, 20, a university student.

The drill comes as regional tensions remain high over North Korea’s nuclear and missile drive, despite the hermit state’s plan to send athletes to next month’s Winter Games in the South, which has drawn global attention.

North Korea has singled out Japan, a key US ally in the region, for verbal attacks, threatenin­g to sink the country into the sea and to turn it into ashes.

Last year, Pyongyang fired two missiles over Japan and has splashed others into the sea near the country, sparking a mix of panic and outrage.

Every time North Korea launches a missile over Japan, the nation’s alert system warns residents via mobile phones and streetside loudspeake­r broadcasts.

But many people say that such a system is useless, with too little time to evacuate and few facilities in place to survive a nuclear attack.

There have also been false alarms. Last week, Japan’s public broadcaste­r NHK mistakenly flashed that North Korea appeared to have launched a missile, warning people to take cover before apologisin­g for the error only minutes later.

That came just days after a false cellphone warning of an incoming ballistic missile terrified residents in Hawaii. — AFP

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