Khaleej Times

A rude awakening for Japan

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tokyo — Ai Onodera was sound asleep in Hokkaido, northern Japan on Tuesday when an alarm on her mobile phone jolted her awake at 6:02am: “Missile launch. Missile launch. North Korea appears to have fired a missile. Take refuge in a solid building or undergroun­d.”

Four minutes earlier, at 5:58am, North Korea had launched its first ballistic missile to fly over Japan since 2009, and it was headed her way, towards Japan’s northernmo­st main island.

Within three minutes of the launch, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had ordered officials to gather and analyse incoming informatio­n. A minute later, the government sent out a ‘J-alert’ on its nationwide warning system, telling northern residents including Onodera of the missile threat.

In a panic, Onodera turned on the TV. All channels were flashing a bulletin with the same warning. She quickly called her husband, who was away on a business trip.

“I was terrified that I wouldn’t see him again,” said the 33-yearold resident of Sapporo, Hokkaido’s capital.

Just a few short minutes after the first public warning, at 6:06am, the missile entered the air space over Hokkaido, according to government bulletins released soon after.

By 6:07am, the missile — travelling at close to 12,000km/hour and at a maximum altitude of 550km — had hurtled across the island, flying out to sea.

In many northern towns, sirens wailed and loudspeake­rs urged residents to take precaution­s, sending some scrambling to leave their houses while others confessed they had no idea what they should do.

Some people still living in temporary

We felt helpless knowing there was nothing we could do even while a missile was passing through the skies of Japan Hiroaki Kumasaka, a Tokyo worker

housing after the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami said on social media “What do they mean, solid buildings? We don’t have any.”

Local officials rushed to their offices hours early as trains in the region, including bullet trains from Tokyo to the north, were briefly halted.

“We felt helpless knowing there was nothing we could do even while a missile was passing through the skies of Japan,” said Hiroaki Kumasaka, 38, who works at a publishing company and was at Tokyo Station for a business trip up north.

“I sent a message to my family saying that ‘Japan is no longer safe,’ and the stranger standing next to me shared the same sentiments with me,” he said. In recent weeks, North Korea has launched a series of missiles toward Japan, but most of them fell into the Sea of Japan to the west of the country.

The growing threats have prompted several coastal towns on Japan’s main island of Honshu to hold missile drills. Hokkaido, a island of 5.5 million known for its ski resorts, seafood, beer and potatoes, was planning what appeared to be its first such drill this Friday. —

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